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Tara McDonald, mother of Victoria Stafford, becomes emotional during the end of her press conference from outside her home in Woodstock, Ont., Friday, May 22, 2009. Victoria Stafford's grandmother Linda Winters is hugged outside her daugter Tara McDonald's home on Wednesday, May 20, 2009. (Dave Chidley / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Police in Woodstock have released a photo of the suspect car involved in the abduction and murder of Victoria Stafford. Tara McDonald, mother of Victoria Stafford, becomes emotional during the end of her press conference from outside her home in Woodstock, Ont., Friday, May 22, 2009. OPP police officers prepare to take off in a helicopter in search for the body of the missing Victoria Tori Stafford.

New images in Tori case; body still missing

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CTV News Video

CTV Newsnet: Constable Laurie-Anne Maitland
Police say the Honda recently seized in the case of Victoria Stafford could be the key in determining the whereabouts of the young girl's remains.
CTV National News: John Vennavally-Rao on Tori Stafford's mother speaking out
For the first time since learning of her daughter's death, Tori Stafford's mother emerged from seclusion today to talk to reporters.
CTV Toronto: Jim Junkin on day three of the search for Tori Stafford's remains
The OPP searched from the air and ground, even using cadaver-sniffing dogs, as they tried to find the remains of murder victim Tori Stafford. Jim Junkin reports.
CTV Newsnet: Tara McDonald, mother of Victoria Stafford, part one
Speaking for the first time since the arrests in her daughter's death, Tara McDonald speaks to how her family is coping, discussions about her in the community and what happen's next.
CTV Newsnet: Tara McDonald, mother of Victoria Stafford, part two
Tara McDonald answers questions about the lie detector test, being called the 'prime suspect,' on how her son is coping with his sister's death.
CTV Toronto: Austin Delaney with a grieving mother's words about her dead daughter's case
Tara McDonald thinks that Terri-Lynne Rafferty, accused of helping kidnap her daughter Tori Stafford, is just helping police look for the body to enjoy some helicopter rides. Austin Delaney reports.
Canada AM: Elliot Ferguson, Woodstock Sentinel Review, with details on the area being searched
The female suspect in the kidnapping and murder of Victoria Stafford has been accompanying police all afternoon as they urgently search for the remains of the young victim.
Canada AM: Friends and neighbours react to the tragedy in Woodstock, Ont.
The mothers of two children who were friends with Victoria Stafford discuss how the kids are dealing with tragedy in this tight-knit community.

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Date: Sat. May. 23 2009 1:07 AM ET

Police searching for Victoria Stafford's remains released images Friday of a Honda sedan which may have been involved in the young girl's abduction six weeks ago.

The blue Honda, which is partially covered by black spray paint, was spotted by video cameras in the parking lot of the Home Depot in Guelph, Ont., around the time Victoria was kidnapped on April 8.

While police charged two people in the young girl's disappearance and death earlier this week, officers continue to scour swaths of land near Woodstock Ont., looking for the girl's remains.

Oxford Community Police Const. Laurie-Anne Maitland said Friday that police hope images of the Honda may trigger community response about the body's whereabouts.

Maitland said that the 2003 sedan was seized by police and is considered a suspect vehicle.

Earlier this week, suspect Terri-Lynne McClintic was seen in a police search helicopter flying around the Guelph area. McClintic was reportedly helping officers track down the body.

"It's been painstakingly long, this entire investigation," Maitland told CTV Newsnet in a telephone interview from Woodstock. "They're being very thorough, but they've yet to find her."

Earlier in the day, Tara McDonald, Victoria's mom, cast doubt on the theory that McClintic was helping police.

"I think if she knew where our daughter was at this point, then they wouldn't be searching," she told reporters in front of her Woodstock Friday.

"I honestly feel that she's just enjoying some helicopter rides and some fresh air because she's probably not going to be getting very much of that in the future."

McClintic, 18, is facing charges of kidnapping and being an accessory to murder after the fact. McClintic and her boyfriend, Michael Thomas C.S. Rafferty, were arrested Tuesday.

No allegations against Rafferty and McClintic have yet been proven in a court of law.

McClintic's co-operation a 'gesture'

McClintic's lawyer said her client is co-operating in the search as a gesture to the girl's family.

"Certainly she's doing it because she feels she needs to do this for the family and for Tori," lawyer Jeanine LeRoy told CTV Toronto on Friday.

On Friday, a judge extended a court order allowing McClintic to help police until Sunday.

"She did indicate that the weather changes and the foliage changes (since April 8) are making that tougher," LeRoy told The Canadian Press Friday.

Police continued to focus their search in an area between Guelph and Fergus, including a rock pile. OPP officers with a cadaver-sniffing dog are involved.

On Thursday, police picked up a dumpster near Fergus and sent it away so that its contents could be examined.

McDonald confirmed she won't be making any funeral arrangements until Tori's body is found.

"It's not that I don't believe what's going on," she said. "I know what's going on. But I'm not going to be able to go through that twice."

McDonald-McClintic links

McDonald said she met McClintic twice at her mother Carol's house but never really spoke with her.

"We were going to breed our dogs. That's not a rumour, that's a fact," she said, adding they were going to offer them furniture because they had none.

She said after two meetings with the elder McClintic, she refused to have anything more to do with them.

McDonald said she developed some suspicions about Terri-Lynne after the surveillance footage came out and then when a sketch was released on April 21.

Her boyfriend James Goric went over to the McClintic home two or three days into the ordeal. By that time, Terri-Lynne had cut her hair.

McDonald has battled an Oxycontin addiction, but when asked about any drug ties to the McClintics, she said: "Absolutely not."

McDonald on her ordeal

For a 42-day period, McDonald had to cope with the immense stress of being the mother of a missing child while being a suspect in her disappearance.

"I told everybody from the beginning that we had nothing to do with it," she said.

Whispers started about her, both in conversation around town and in electronic forums such as Facebook, once surveillance video of Tori leaving school with a woman in a puffy white coat came out and a composite sketch of the suspect.

There is some resemblance, but McDonald was both older and heavier than the person in the video.

"It was hard, but at the end of the day, there's two things we were sure of -- that we had nothing to do with it and number two, that we're amazing parents," McDonald said of her ex-husband Rodney Stafford, Tori's father.

Police at one point did directly say she was a suspect, McDonald said, but she couldn't recall when that happened.

"I was disgusted," she said, but added part of the police's job is to make a person feel guilty to try and make them "come clean."

They did question her after she failed some lie detector questions.

"It's wasn't that they were extremely rude about it or pressing, but it was always a gnawing suspicion from us that they were looking at us," she said.

Her son Daryn, 11, recently took out his feelings by breaking a metal mop stick in the backyard, she said, adding they have told him that "your sister has gone to heaven."

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