Luong was scheduled to appear in court Thursday. District Attorney John Tyson said he did not believe Luong had a lawyer.
Luong came to Alabama from Vietnam in 1984 and worked as a shrimper, Phengsisomboun said. The couple lived with Phan's mother at Bayou La Batre, a fishing village 20 miles southwest of Mobile with a large Southeast Asian community.
Phengsisomboun said the couple had recently moved back to the area from Hinesville, Ga.
The family initially feared he had traded the children to support his drug habit, Phengsisomboun said. Luong had a crack habit and had run through an insurance settlement from an auto accident, he said.
About 70 people in boats and helicopters searched water as deep as 55 feet. The search area covered 100 square miles because the current might have swept the children away, Sheriff Sam Cochran said.
The search was called off late Wednesday afternoon when dense fog rolled in, completely obscuring the bridge. It was to resume in the morning, weather permitting.
Some family members and friends held out hope that the children weren't dead.
"I just pray for the kids, that they are still alive," said Van Lam,
wow gold a family friend who was at a market with Phan's mother Wednesday afternoon.
The overall situation, however, remained very grim as the nation braces for Lunar New Year return traffic peak, the task force said. Early preparation should be made to guarantee smooth transportation in the face of another round of precipitation and snow in south and southwest China in the next 10 days, it warned.
Authorities in Mobile confirmed Luong had a history of drug abuse but had no details.
A day after reporting his four young children were missing, a shrimp fisherman broke down and confessed that he threw them off an 80-foot-high bridge to their deaths, authorities said Wednesday.
Lam Luong, 37, was charged with four counts of capital murder, and divers searched the murky waters for the bodies of the youngsters, who ranged
wow gold in age from a few months to 3 years.
This photograph released by the Mobile County Sheriff's Office in Mobile, Ala., shows Lam Luong, 37, of Irvington, Ala., as he was being booked on Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2007. [Agencies]
Luong had a drug habit and had argued with his wife, Ngoc Phan, before taking the children, said Phan's brother-in-law, Kam Phengsisomboun.
Luong's girlfriend, who was living in a hotel in nearby Gulfport, Miss.,
wow powerleveling figured into the couple's argument on Sunday and then on Monday morning, family members and police said.
Authorities said they believe Luong then drove Monday to the two-lane Dauphin Island bridge over the Intracoastal Waterway, stopped at the highest part of the span and threw the youngsters over the side.
Luong and his wife reported the children missing Monday. He initially told police that
wow gold he had given the kids to his girlfriend and that she failed to return them, investigators and family members said.
But authorities said they found holes in his account, and he later changed his story.
Missing and presumed dead were 4-month-old Danny Luong; 1-year-old Lindsey Luong; 2-year-old Hannah Luong; and 3-year-old Ryan Phan. Phan is not the man's biological child, but Luong raised him from infancy, authorities said.
Phengsisomboun said he was later told by investigators that a
wow powerleveling witness had seen someone throw a bundle from the bridge and then saw three children in a nearby car.
He was arrested in October in Hinesville on a
wow power leveling crack-possession charge. The case has not been acted on by a grand jury.
Phan, 23, was in seclusion Wednesday morning at her mother's brick home, the front porch cluttered with children's shoes.
China is expected to see another peak of railway traffic since Feb. 11, the six day of the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday, said the Ministry of Railway on Sunday.
Post-Spring Festival railway traffic peak saw more than five million passengers daily last year
wow gold and we expect more passenger flow this year, predicted the ministry.
Highway transportation in many areas hampered by icy and snowy weather has returned to normalcy. About 28.1 million people have been carried by expressways and trunk highways on Sunday, up
wow power leveling 6.05 million over the previous day.
Some 4,291 flights carrying 535,000 passengers took off on Sunday, 23,000 more than a day earlier.
