As dogs, divers and volunteers search for a missing 14-year-old girl, this tiny farming community is being forced to confront the growing problem of teenagers and drugs.

Raina Bo Shirley disappeared last week after she and a friend went to a well-known party spot with a suspected drug dealer and his 13-year-old nephew.The other girl was found partially clothed and in a drugged stupor, and authorities fear Raina was drugged, raped and kidnapped. The 13-year-old boy was in custody and the older being sought.

"We all know this is a drug-related problem," Raina's grandfather Ed Nickerman told a town gathering Monday in the auditorium at Potter Valley Community High School.

"If you get involved (with drugs), you will tear the heart out of your parents and tear the heart out of your brothers and sisters," Nickerman told the assembly in this sleepy town of 3,000, surrounded by rolling hills 110 miles north of San Francisco.

As Nickerman spoke, dogs trained to smell decomposing bodies were used to search the rugged Eel River canyon.

A crew of about 20 volunteers went door-to-door asking people to check their barns, sheds and fields. The search resumed Tuesday.

"I still have high hopes that if she's not found in the next few days that she'll be found alive someplace," Nickerman said.

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Raina disappeared last Wednesday with her 13-year-old friend. The other girl was found in town later that night and told authorities that she and Raina had accepted a ride from 28-year-old Arnoldo Jorge Manzo and his nephew, who was also Raina's classmate.

Later that night, Raina's clothes and backpack were found.

"This has opened a lot of eyes for people in Potter Valley," said Brandy Wood, 16, a sophomore at the high school.

Brian Burris, 18, a senior, added, "Drug use is going to go down a lot."

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