As police begin to deliver terrible bad news to anxious relatives of the trapped, the heartbreaking scene of Christchurch's painful family is emerging.Kent Manning, 15, whose sister Libby and their father asked not to be named, was captured by a photographer who was in tears when the police told them, after the building that collapsed in yesterday's earthquake, there was no hope of finding their mother alive.Emergency workers pulled out of the collapsed CTV building this morning.After 15 people were found alive in an air pocket, the rumor proved to be false.Later, a rescue team spokesman confirmed that they believed no one had survived the choking of smoke.Family members are beginning to feel frustrated and they are desperately trying to get close to the collapsed building and learn about the fate of the people they love.Mark Maynard is facing a painful wait for news, with his wife working on the first floor of the collapsed Pine Gould Company building.Just 20 minutes before yesterday's earthquake, Kelly Maynard called her husband and said she had left her phone at home.He hasn't heard from her since the building collapsed.\ "It's still not good at the moment.I'm waiting. What are you doing?\'\' he said.The couple had two children aged two and three, but Mr Maynard said they didn't understand what was going on and they lived with his sister.A comparison of the world's recent major earthquakes.The size of the circle indicates the relative magnitude of the earthquake.He said it was heartbreaking to answer her daughter's question about her missing mother."When we got up this morning, they asked," Where's Mom, "and I said," she's still working, "he said ".Mr. Maynard said that he had two daughters waiting at home and that he said that his wife had been working on the first floor of the building, which "collapsed" together in yesterday's earthquake ".But after rescuers rescued a woman trapped in the rubble from the Pyne Gould building for more than 24 hours, some good news has emerged from the rubble.At first, it was thought that the woman named Ann bodeakin was Anne worth.An Australian who spoke to reporters deep in the ruins of high schoolHer cell phone went up to the office before the battery was dead.Earlier today, the bodeakin MS was rescued from the rubble and sent to an ambulance waiting.Her husband, Graham Richardson, has been on an anxious vigil near the scene, saying she doesn't seem to be seriously injured.Earlier, Mr. Richardson said that he had a "unbearable" night without knowing where his wife was.-with Stuff.co.