About 70 police staff and volunteers will be searching Stewart Island for the next two days, searching for Joe Freiman and testing new search and rescue equipment. Photo / Getty
About 70 police staff and volunteers will be searching Stewart Island for the next two days, searching for Joe Freiman and testing new search and rescue equipment. Photo / Getty
Police search teams are dusting off a 25-year-old missing person case in a bid to test their new gear.
Joe Freiman, a 64-year-old farmer, went missing during a hunting trip on Stewart Island in 1991 and was never found.
Search and Rescue will today return to the area to resumethe hunt for Freiman in order to test a new radio transmitting tool they've been trialling.
About 70 police and volunteers from the Southern District will make use of the SARTrack system as they search the area on foot for two days with no air support.
"The search area is probably one of the most remote parts of New Zealand so it will be difficult for police to provide good communications," Community Constable Dale Jenkins said.
"In any areas where cellular coverage is difficult, this radio tool can be particularly helpful."
He said the system allowed a controller to see where all members were and what areas had been covered in real time, along with allowing notes to be made.
Freiman vanished after leaving his party at the Mid Big Glory Hunter Camp to go hunting along for a few hours on May 30, 1991 and failed to return in the evening.