CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) – Hundreds of law enforcement officials and volunteers spent two days combing a massive area by air, foot and boat for signs of three young boys who disappeared while playing outside one of their homes.

In the end, they were found just steps away, dead in the trunk of a car.

A neighbor, Carmen Villa, said Friday she saw one of the boys’ fathers open the trunk of the car and collapse to his knees screaming. It was not immediately clear how the three boys got into the vehicle.

“We haven’t determined whether this was foul play or whether it was just a tragic accident,” said Camden County prosecutor Vincent Sarubbi, who said the medical examiner was preparing to do autopsies on the bodies.

The boys – Jesstin “Manny” Pagan, 5; Daniel Agosto, 6; and Anibal “Juni” Cruz, 11 – vanished from the yard next to Anibal’s home on Wednesday evening.

The car where they were found was parked in a driveway next to the yard. Police Chief Edwin Figueroa said the vehicle had been searched before, but it was not clear whether the trunk was checked.

About 150 police, firefighters and other officials had searched the neighborhood and Delaware River for two days using boats, helicopters, all-terrain vehicles and tracking dogs.

Neighbors in this desperately poor, crime-ridden city of about 80,000 people across the river from Philadelphia had also passed out fliers to motorists with the boys’ photos and descriptions.

Hundreds of people milled about in the neighborhood at dusk on Friday, many of them in tears, as news helicopters hovered overhead.

“If it was one of my kids, I’d be devastated, like into a million pieces,” said neighbor Maria Rolon, 28.

Anibal and Daniel both lived in Camden’s largely Puerto Rican Cramer Hill neighborhood. Jesstin lived several miles away in Mount Ephraim. He and his mother had been visiting Anibal’s home at the time of their disappearance.

Relatives said Anibal often played with younger children – in part because they were more like him than kids his age.

He suffered from neurological problems and had just finished the fifth grade at a school for special needs students.

“He may be 11 years old, but his mind is more like a 4- or 3-year-old,” said his grandmother, Carmen Cruz.

Daniel disappeared a day before his last day of kindergarten. He had never gone off the block alone before, said his mother, Iraida Roman. She described him as a regular kid who liked to “ride bikes, play in the dirt – simple kid stuff.”

Jesstin also attended a special needs school, said a family friend, Cornell Worlds Jr. The boy idolized the Los Angeles Lakers and star player Kobe Bryant, Worlds said.

He was “a good-spirited type of kid,” Worlds said.

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