HOPE AND PRAY: Nachman Kletzky, father of missing 9-year-old Leibby, returns home yesterday.
An "angelic" 9-year-old boy vanished after getting lost while walking alone for the first time from his Borough Park day camp and then following a man down a busy street in the tight-knit Hasidic community.
FBI agents last night joined the desperate, massive manhunt for little Leibby Kletzky, who was on his way to meet his parents when he disappeared late Monday afternoon. He was last seen on surveillance video around 45th Street and Dahill Road walking behind a bearded man in a white shirt and dark pants.
"The boy is standing alone at some point. The male crosses the street in his direction, and the boy follows him on Dahill Road," said NYPD spokesman Paul Browne, adding that it's unclear whether the pair exchanged words.
The man -- who Browne described as "a person of interest" -- is seen driving off in a gold, possibly Japanese-make car, although "we don't know for certain whether the boy had gotten into the vehicle or not," he said.
Cops were rushing to check Dumpsters and commercial bins in the area for potential evidence before any trash was hauled off, sources said.
Leibby's distraught dad, Nachman -- who had already identified his son wandering in another, earlier street video taken a few blocks away -- was expected to be asked by cops to study the later footage to see if he could identify the man.
When the dad, a passenger-van driver with five daughters, reviewed the earlier footage, "He had tears in his eyes," said Moishe Lefkovitz, the manager of the locksmith shop at 44th Street and 15th Avenue where the surveillance footage was taken.
"He kept shaking his head, saying, 'Where are you going? Where are you going? What are you doing?' "
Authorities say the boy was videoed walking alone from the Boyan Day Camp at a school on 44th Street near 12th Avenue at 4:50 p.m. Monday after returning from a class trip to Manhattan Beach Park.
Leibby -- who usually takes the bus -- was allowed to leave camp on foot so he could meet his mom and dad just seven blocks away, where they had a doctor's appointment.
The couple even took special pains to repeatedly go over the boy's walking route with him, a pal said.
The child had instructions to walk up 44th Street to 13th Avenue and then turn right on 13th Avenue and walk straight across to 50th Street, said a family friend, Rabbi Bernard Freilich.
"It sounded like he wasn't an expert on the streets," Freilich said.
Surveillance shows the boy walking out the front door on 44th Street toward 13th Avenue, as instructed, but instead of turning right toward the meeting spot, he kept going.
Video footage from the locksmith shop shows him on that corner at around 5:20 p.m. The last known footage of him with the man was recorded between 5:30 and 5:45 p.m.
His parents waited until 7 p.m. before contacting the Shomrim, the local civil-patrol group. Shomrim contacted the NYPD at 8 p.m.
Officers and search dogs, aided by the scent of Leibby's personal belongings -- including of his black leather shoes -- flooded the school looking for clues. An estimated 3,000 volunteers -- including busloads from Hasidic communities in Lakewood, NJ, and Monsey, NY -- joined the search.
FBI spokesman Jim Margolin said the agency is assisting in the search.
The boy's uncle Isaac Kletzky said the family believes "he's probably somewhere dehydrated, in someone's home."
A family friend, Shmuel Eckstein, 44, described the boy as an "angel."
State Assemblyman Dov Hikind (D-Brooklyn) -- who is leading the collection of reward money for a fund that has already topped $100,000 -- said Leibby's mom, Itta, "is especially distressed. It's getting scary. Something's got to break . . . You don't just vanish."
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