DETROIT (AP) — A 12-year-old boy
 who had been missing for a week and a half and was the subject of an 
extensive police search was found alive and well Wednesday in the 
basement of his home.
Officers 
discovered the boy while serving a search warrant on the home as part of
 their investigation into his disappearance. It's not clear if the boy 
had been there the entire time; officers had been inside the home before
 and cadaver dogs searched the house last week.
Detroit
 Police Chief James Craig said when police found Charlie Bothuell V, he 
appeared to be hiding and did not announce himself. Hours earlier, Craig
 had told reporters that investigators were "not ruling out the 
possibility of homicide" in the case.
When
 police found the boy, he was behind some boxes and a large plastic 
drum. Bedding also was found nearby. The boy will be medically 
evaluated.
"He was nervous, but excited," Craig said. "He indicated he was hungry. He appeared fine."
The
 boy lives in the home with his father and stepmother. The father, 
Charlie Bothuell IV, said he was as surprised as anyone that his son was
 in the basement.
"I'm 
shocked. I looked. The Detroit police looked. The FBI looked," he said. 
"To imply that I knew my son was in the basement is absurd."
The elder Bothuell was swarmed by reporters outside the house when he arrived home Wednesday evening.
"I thought my son was dead," he said as he broke down in tears and hugged a reporter.
Craig
 told reporters earlier Wednesday that the boy's father had taken a 
polygraph test about his son's disappearance, but the boy's stepmother 
declined to do so.
 
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