The Texas-based organization that helps find missing persons across the country has halted its effort to locate Aniah Blanchard because it has “used every resource available,” according to a report.

Texas EquuSearch, which provides horse-mounted searches, joined the search for the missing Auburn-area college student last week.

“We’re heavy hearted as we head back to Texas today. The Auburn community has been so supportive while we’ve been here, and for that, we’re very grateful. They’ve given us help in every way we’ve asked. It’s always hard to leave folks without the answer we came here to find. But we’ve used every resource available to us over the last nine days to locate Aniah, so until we have new information that leads us in a new direction, we’re suspending the search," Destinie Duvall of Texas EquuSearch told WRBL on Tuesday. “We have faith in the Auburn Police Department the public and other agencies involved in finding us that new lead. We’re prepared to come back immediately when the call comes.”

Neither Duvall nor Texas EquuSearch could be reached by AL.com to confirm WRBL’s report.

There has been no signs of Blanchard, a Homewood native, since she disappeared nearly three weeks ago.

Blanchard, a graduate of Homewood High School and a student at Southern Union Community College near Auburn, has now been missing for nearly three weeks. A suspect in her disappearance – 29-year-old Ibraheem Yazeed – is in custody. He has a lengthy arrest record for violent crimes. Lee County District Attorney Brandon Hughes confirmed a gag order has been issued in the case against Yazeed after media reports that there was a hearing held Sunday. "I will be glad to discuss what I can if and when I am able to,'' he said via email.

According to the affidavit by Auburn police Det. Josh Mixon, Blanchard was last seen by a family member the evening of Oct. 23 at a residence in the 1000 block of Alan Avenue in Auburn. The Southern Union College student from Homewood was officially reported missing Thursday, Oct. 24. She last communicated with a friend late on the night of Oct. 23. Police said her vehicle was seen in the early-morning hours of Oct. 24 along South College Street.

Police recovered the teen’s black 2017 Honda CRV from an apartment complex on the 6100 block of Boardwalk Boulevard in Montgomery around 6:15 p.m. the following evening, which was Friday. A citizen reported the vehicle to police.

Auburn police Capt. Lorenza Dorsey said Blanchard’s vehicle had been damaged sometime between the last time it was seen in Auburn and Friday night. The charging document obtained Friday said that blood evidence was discovered in the passenger’s compartment of the vehicle and was “indicative of someone suffering a life-threatening injury.”

The evidence was submitted to the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences and confirmed to be that of Blanchard. Video evidence from the convenience store at 1599 South College Street placed both Blanchard and Yazeed at the store during the same time. “This was the last time she was seen,” Mixon wrote. A witness later identified Yazeed as the individual he saw forcing Blanchard into a vehicle against her will.

Beth Holloway, the mother of missing Mountain Brook High School student Natalee Holloway, teamed up with EquuSearch in the search for Blanchard. Holloway disappeared while in Aruba for a graduation trip 14 years ago. While her remains were never found, she was legally declared dead.