Houston Chronicle

2 teenagemur­der suspects turn up dead inManitoba

- By Dan Bilefsky

The mystery had riveted Canadians: A young couple and a botanist shot dead in a violent rampage in British Columbia. Two young suspects who disappeare­d without a trace. A crosscount­ry manhunt in a remote, swampy area of northern Manitoba that appeared to be turning up few clues.

Then onWednesda­y, the Canadian police said they believed theyhad foundthe bodies of the two teenagers suspected in the killings.

Kam McLeod, 19, and Bryer Schmegelsk­y, 18, had been the subject of an intense two-week cross-province manhunt that brought a sense of fear to Manitoba, where some residents said they had been afraid to leave their homes. The case drew internatio­nal attention to an area unused to getting much notice.

An autopsy was underway to confirm the identities of the bodies, Assistant Commission­er Jane MacLatchy, the commanding officer of theManitob­a Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Manitoba, said at a news conference.

But she said the police were confident the bodies belonged to the teenagers.

MacLatchy said a breakthrou­gh in the investigat­ion came Friday after police officers discovered personal items belonging to the suspects on the shore of the Nelson River. The police also found a damaged aluminum boat.

The police described the breakthrou­gh on Twitter. “Our officers knew we needed just one piece of evidence to move the search forward & on Friday, August 2nd, the items found on the shoreline of the Nelson River & directly linked to the suspects, enables officers to narrow down the search,” RCMP Manitoba wrote.

The discovery of the items led officers into a dense area of brush less than a mile away, where they found the bodies, the assistant commission­er said.

The youths were suspected of killing Leonard Dyck, a 64-year-old University of British Columbia lecturer; Lucas Fowler, 23, an Australian; and his girlfriend, Chynna Deese, 24, of Charlotte, N.C.

The police said they remained baffled about amotive.

McLeod and Schmegelsk­y had been friends since elementary school. The latter reportedly collected Nazi parapherna­lia and may have been sympatheti­c to Nazi ideology, but his father, Al Schmegelsk­y, denied that. He told the Canadian news media that his son had been on “a suicide mission.”

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