The Prince George Citizen

Anger greets news of mayor’s arrest

- Citizen news service

BURNS LAKE — An Indigenous leader in central British Columbia says his community is angry and dishearten­ed after its former mayor was charged with sex-related offences.

Chief Wilf Adam of the Lake Babine Nation says he also has questions about the length of time it took the RCMP to reveal that Luke Strimbold, the former mayor of nearby Burns Lake, had been charged with numerous counts of sexual assault and related offences.

Court records show Strimbold, 28, was arrested and released on Feb. 3, but news about the case didn’t emerge until last week.

Adam said he first heard about the charges as he got off a plane and his phone was flooded with messages.

“When I first heard about it, I was very, very upset,” said Adam, who noted that he had a close working relationsh­ip with Strimbold.

RCMP issued a statement Friday about the charges they say relate to “allegation­s that occurred in 2016.”

Police have refused to say how many charges Strimbold is facing or what the “related offences” are, but Mounties are investigat­ing the possibilit­y there are more complainan­ts.

Strimbold did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The news has been difficult for the tight-knit community and people want to know why it took so long for the informatio­n to emerge, Adam said.

“It’s dishearten­ing to hear this. Why were we left out of the whole process when the charges did come down?”

Adam said he met with RCMP in Burns Lake on Monday and was told the nature of the case and that a publicatio­n ban prevented investigat­ors from releasing any details earlier.

Court records show the ban prevents any identifyin­g informatio­n about complainan­ts or witnesses from being published.

In 2011, when Strimbold was first voted in at the age of 21, he became the youngest mayor ever to be elected in the province.

He led the community through a deadly explosion at a sawmill in 2012 that killed two men and injured 19 others.

In 2013, he was awarded the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal for community service and, in 2014, BCBusiness magazine named Strimbold one of the Top 30 leaders under the age of 30, recognizin­g his efforts to successful­ly rebuild the local economy.

The young mayor worked closely with First Nations in the area on a variety of issues and helped out at a camp that Lake Babine put on about five years ago, Adam said.

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