The Prince George Citizen

RCMP looking for people that had ‘anything to do with Happy’s Roofing’

- FOWLER

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The company is no longer in business and its records were destroyed in a flood last year although its previous owners have been “extremely cooperativ­e” with the investigat­ion.

“Certainly, they went to work sites across northern B.C. so we’re looking for anybody that had any work done by Happy’s Roofing, worked at Happy’s Roofing, had a friend that worked at Happy’s Roofing, anything to do with Happy’s Roofing,” Shinkaruk said.

There is a chance Fowler worked there for only a short period.

“They had a number of people who worked there for only an extremely short period of time and frankly not be good employees from what I understand,” Shinkaruk said.

UNBC psychology professor Paul Siakaluk said memories of events 40 years ago can be shaky at best although Fowler may be an exception for some.

“I think the actual pool of people that would have good informatio­n for the police about this guy are going to be very few and it would have to be from people who had experience­s with this guy that were disturbing enough for them to say ‘wow, that was something else.’”

Police said this week that DNA evidence has matched Fowler to the 1974 death of Colleen MacMillen. The 16-year-old was last seen walking along Highway 97 from her home in Lac La Hache in August that year. Her body was found off a logging road 46 kilometres to the south about a month later.

MacMillen was one of 18 homicides or disappeara­nces under investigat­ion by the RCMP’s Project EPana and the task force now suspects Fowler may also have been behind the deaths of two others on the list:

• Gale Weys, 19, of Clearwater, went missing on Oct. 19, 1973 when she was hitchhikin­g towards Kamloops. Her body was located April 6, 1974 just south of Clearwater off Blackwater Road.

• Pamela Darlington, 19, of Kamloops, was last seen partying at the David Thompson bar on Nov. 6, 1973 and her body was found the next day in a nearby park in the city.

Fowler would have been about 35 years old at the time, stood five-feet ten-inches tall, weighed 160 pounds and he drove a white 1961 Chrysler Imperial with large wings off the back. He was born in Texas and may have had an accent, although police stressed the lack of one should not prevent people from contacting RCMP if they suspect they may have met Fowler.

Fowler had a long list of criminal conviction­s for violent offences in the United States.

“He frequently picked up hitchhiker­s,” Shinkaruk said. “He also attended a lot of taverns and bars and met women in those places and he believed that the majority of those woman that he met in those circumstan­ces desired to be sexually assaulted and desired to be extremely violently assaulted.

“He was also extremely violent towards men so again, we ask the public to think back to that time period and please phone us with any informatio­n that they may have.”

E-Pana’s tip line can be reached at 1-877-543-4822.

Tips can also be made by contacting CrimeStopp­ers.

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