How this headline may connect to industries in Tennessee. Technical scores are below — click any ? for what a metric means.

New details: Missing Tennessee toddler found hidden behind HVAC ductwork in attic

TennesseeGDELTGDELT event0% biasedThu, Jun 4, 2026, 12:00 AM

View Tennessee industries on the map

Goldstein Scale

3.4

Avg Tone

-1.7

Cluster Impact

2.40

Bias Ratio

0%

0 of 14 sentences classified as biased · Model: roberta-anno-lexical-ft-v1

BiasedNon-biased
New details: Missing Tennessee toddler found hidden behind HVAC ductwork in attic.New details: Missing Tennessee toddler found hidden behind HVAC ductwork in attic CLARKSVILLE, Tenn.(WZTV) — New details are emerging after a 3-year-old Clarksville boy at the center of an Amber Alert was reported missing Tuesday and found safe later that night, hidden in his family's attic.He was released from the hospital Wednesday morning, and authorities have now released additional details about how he was located.A large search team was launched for Tyler Hall, and the residence was searched multiple times without success.Two officers conducted an additional detailed search and eventually found Tyler alive in the home's attic.According to authorities, Tyler had crawled into a confined, dark, insulation-filled attic space accessed by a wall ladder and positioned himself at the furthest point from the entrance, hidden behind HVAC ductwork.Officers described the attic as "dark, dusty and filled with electrical wiring." Given the attic conditions and how he was positioned, officers said he was extremely difficult to find until a detective was right upon him.Tyler did not respond when officers called out to him during the search, and the reason remains unknown.After being located, he was evaluated by Montgomery County EMS and transported to Vanderbilt Clarksville as a precautionary measure.He was released from the hospital Wednesday morning and is doing well, according to police.I am truly moved by the outpouring of support from the citizens of Clarksville and the many first responder agencies who responded without hesitation," Chief Ty Burdine said."The way this community comes together in moments like this, whether it's a missing child or a natural disaster, is something you don't take for granted.The Amber Alert prompted 15 agencies to respond to the matter.