Found this:
http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2010/07/kyron_hormans_family_ask...The parents of Kyron Horman said Thursday they believe the missing 7-year old is still alive, and they beseeched the boy's stepmother -- ousted by the family -- to cooperate with police.
"We are extremely confident in how the investigation is going to bring him home to us," said Kyron's mother, Desiree Young, reading from a prepared statement. "We implore Terri Horman to fully cooperate with investigators to bring Kyron home."
The missing boy's parents would not answer other questions about Horman, Kyron's stepmother. Authorities say she was the last person to see him before he vanished June 4 from Skyline School.
Today marks the four-week anniversary of the second-grader's disappearance.
Earlier this week, the boy's father, Kaine Horman, filed papers to divorce Terri Horman and was granted a restraining order that prevents her from seeing their toddler, Kiara.
Terri Horman retained prominent defense lawyer Stephen Houze. He declined to address the parents’ plea to the stepmother. “We're not making any comments about this matter right now,” Houze said.
Multnomah County Sheriff Dan Staton said in a phone interview that investigators believe Kyron is still alive "until we have information to the contrary."
"The investigation has not revealed anything to the contrary," he said.
He added that he could not comment on whether investigators consider Terri Horman -- or anyone else -- a person of interest in the case.
The sheriff said he's heard nothing to suggest Terri Horman's willingness to cooperate with police has changed, except that her decision to hire a lawyer "changes the dynamic on how we interact and at what level we interact."
Investigators have gotten more than 2,500 tips from a call line and interviews with people in the community, Staton said.
In the news briefing at a church across the street from Kyron's school, Kaine Horman, Desiree Young and her husband, Tony Young, released new information they hoped would help find the missing boy.
They said he is allergic to bees. He loves sushi and macaroni and cheese. And he has a V-shaped strawberry birthmark in the middle of his forehead that has faded, but reappears when he cries or gets upset.
"We would like all of you, everyone, to continue to get his face out there, to continue looking for him in your day-to-day activities," the family wrote in a handwritten statement on a white piece of notebook paper.
They composed the statement after meeting with more than a dozen journalists in a session where they barred reporters from The Oregonian and Willamette Week, saying the newspapers had focused too little on the search for Kyron and too much on the family's personal history. But they read the statement in public.
Kryon's parents told reporters they planned to hold regular news briefings starting next week to keep the public focused on finding their boy.
While Kyron's family hasn't commented about the rift between Kaine and Terri Horman, court papers show Kaine Horman moved out of their rural Multnomah County house last Saturday.
Days before the split, a reporter for People magazine interviewed the couple at their home, noting tensions were so high that at one point they weren't speaking, the magazine's editor said Thursday on NBC's "Today" show.