Man seen with University of Virginia student faces driving charge

photo Volunteers talk with their team leader before participating in a massive search effort by the community for missing University of Virginia student Hannah Graham on Sept. 20, 2014, in Charlottesville, Va.

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - A man seen with a University of Virginia student before she disappeared was being sought Sunday on arrest warrants charging him with reckless driving, police announced at a news conference.

Virginia State Police issued the warrants for Jesse Matthew on Saturday after he left the Charlottesville Police Department's station, authorities said. Matthew came to the station with several family members and asked for a lawyer, they said. He was provided with a lawyer and left in a vehicle, driving at a high rate of speed that endangered other drivers, Charlottesville Police Chief Timothy Longo said, adding Matthew was at the station for about an hour.

Law enforcement authorities who had been monitoring Matthew chased the vehicle but abandoned the pursuit due to the high speeds, Longo said.

Matthew has not been charged in the disappearance of 18-year-old Hanna. who was last seen early on Sept. 13 in Charlottesville. Longo said police want to talk to Matthew, who was seen with Graham before she disappeared.

"I believe Jesse Matthew was the last person she was seen with before she vanished off the face of the Earth because it's been a week and we can't find her," Longo said.

Police searched Matthew's car and apartment and are awaiting forensic tests, he added.

"I've made no mistake about it. We want to talk to Jesse Matthew. We want to talk to him," Longo said.

Police said they have focused on Graham's movements the night of Sept. 12 and into the early morning hours of Sept. 13. Graham, a sophomore from northern Virginia, met friends at a restaurant for dinner, stopped by two parties at off-campus housing units and left the second party alone, police have said.

Surveillance videos showed her walking, and at some points running, past a pub and a service station and then onto the Downtown Mall, a seven-block pedestrian strip lined with shops and restaurants.

"Somebody's gotta know where she is and we want to know who that person or persons are," Longo said.

"I don't want to get tunnel vision just because we have a name, just because we saw her with a particular person," he said.

Graham's parents appeared at the news conference and her father, John Graham, appealed for anyone with any information to call a police tip line.

"This is every parent's worst nightmare," John Graham said. "We need to find out what happened to Hannah and make sure it happens to no one else."

More than 1,000 volunteers participated in a weekend search for Hannah Graham, according to authorities.

Graham's disappearance has sent a ripple of fear through the quiet college town of Charlottesville. Students have said they've begun walking in pairs at night and are paying closer attention to their surroundings.

At least three other young women have disappeared in the area in the last five years, though police have said they do not think Graham's disappearance is linked to that of any of the other missing women.

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