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Posted: 2:46 PM- MAGNA - One month after Lark Montague's disappearance, search teams continued to scour this west side suburb Saturday for the grandmother whose sudden departure without diabetes medication, spare clothes or a parting word is steeped in mystery.

Friends fear foul play in the missing person's case although police say there is no evidence of that.

The search gained momentum this weekend with the help of the Destiny Search Project - the same group that discovered the body of Brigham Young University student Camille Cleverley in the already-searched canyons east of Provo.

Group founder Nick Herrera hoped to find a similar breakthrough Saturday in Montague's disappearance.

More than a dozen family members and friends canvassed the community by car during Saturday's drizzle, some traveling as far as Eagle Mountain to plaster neighboring town with "Missing" posters.

Their efforts add to an exhaustive monthlong search mounted by Montague's husband, Dennis. He has hiked Butterfield Canyon, reviewed security camera footage from a Tooele County convenience store and posted fliers as far away as Las Vegas.

So far, he's found nothing.

"At every turn, we've come up empty," he said. "Just nothing whatsoever. It's like she dropped off the face of the earth."

The 55-year-old Lark Montague vanished in late September, taking only her husband's pewter-colored 2002 Chevrolet Trailblazer. Family members say she was depressed and struggled with the recent move-in of a daughter and her five children.

But the family has grown increasingly fearful. Not only did Montague leave without her prescription for type II diabetes, but she hasn't swiped a credit card or written a check since she vanished.

Even her cancer-stricken mother in Texas hasn't heard a word from her.

And so the family searches. Dennis Montague - Lark's husband of 23 years - said Saturday that he has consented to a polygraph test in connection with his wife's disappearance.

As of early afternoon, searchers had come no closer to finding the woman. They plan to canvass the community again next Saturday, with volunteers meeting at 8 a.m. in the park behind the Magna Recreation Center, 3270 S. 8400 West.