"I think the industry standard is (or should be) that missing people are treated the same regardless of whether it is believed to be intentional or unintentional. Investigations should lead the search. If there aren’t any clues or leads to suggest where a person has gone, it can be fruitless to search until there are more leads. I work with some rangers here that, I feel, don’t really feel the same urgency about searching for suicidal subjects (believing that if they wanted to die, so be it), and that value judgment may be prevalent other places as well.
As far as I’m concerned, suicidal subjects
should be searched for as vigorously as any other missing person. The only
things that should influence search effort are a lack of investigatory leads,
or a huge saturation of search effort in that area where the person was
believed to be (technically speaking, when the 'probability of detection' is
high and the person still hasn’t been located – ie. you have to reasonably be
able to stop looking in the same place at some point…)."
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