Families of missing watch and worry
More details about man linked to Salmon Arm farm, but no charges over human remains
A farm near Salmon Arm, where police have expanded their weeklong search for more human remains, is the subject of intense scrutiny by worried British Columbians, especially the families of five women missing from the area.
But the man who appears to be at the centre of this search — Curtis Wayne Sagmoen, 37, the son of farm owners Wayne and Evelyn Sagmoen — remains mostly a mystery.
“I didn’t even know he (Curtis) existed till the last week or two,” said one neighbour who has lived near the Sagmoens for a long time.
So, what do we know about the subject of this high-profile RCMP probe?
Sagmoen was employed as a piledriver and bridgeman, work that involves construction or repair of bridges, docks and wharfs, according to the union that represents these workers. The union would not speak to Postmedia for this story.
He has not been working, though, since his arrest last week after an escort was allegedly threatened Aug. 28 with a shotgun near the Sagmoen farm at 2290 Salmon River Rd.
On that morning, neighbours Steve Langenegger and Ted Edes found a grey Mazda with its engine still running crashed on a small bridge near the Sagmoen farm and two pink slippers lying on the road nearby. Bare footprints were in the sandy soil leading away from the car, which seemed hastily abandoned.
“They (the footprints) were far apart so she must have been running for her life,” Langenegger told Postmedia. He phoned the police.
A month and a half later, Sagmoen was arrested in connection with that incident and charged with disguising his face with intent to commit an offence, intentionally discharging a firearm, pointing a firearm, uttering threats, careless use or storage of a firearm and possessing a weapon for a dangerous purpose.
He was also charged with possessing methamphetamine, on Sept. 5.
Sagmoen is facing no charges in relation to the human remains that police found on the family farm Friday; RCMP brought in more heavy equipment Wednesday to escalate the search, as well as items suggesting officers will be on the property for some time — mobile toilets, coffee makers and microwaves.
Some on Facebook posted that they went to school with Sagmoen in Maple Ridge at Harry Hooge elementary and Thomas Haney Secondary. A few said he was a good friend at the time. Others spoke of off-roading with him.
Property records show Sagmoen lived in Maple Ridge in the 10800 block of 248 St. with one of his brothers in 2004. Later, he moved to a townhouse on Gilker Hill Road, where he appeared to live until 2013, when CIBC filed a mortgage foreclosure petition.
In 2013, there were two assaults against women on a trail near this townhouse.
Southeast District spokesman Cpl. Dan Molaskuk said he was not aware of any recent communication between investigators at the Sagmoen farm and investigators in Maple Ridge.
On his own Facebook site, Sagmoen has “liked” more than two dozen sites featuring scantily clad women, as well as a few about vehicles. The Facebook groups he follows range from heavy equipment operator jobs to horses for sale to “bikini girls.”
In recent years, neighbours said Sagmoen lived intermittently with his parents on the Salmon River Road farm.
RCMP continued to say Wednesday that no link has yet been made between the search of the farm and the five women who have disappeared from communities near the farm over the last 20 months.
Caitlin Potts, 27, was last seen Feb. 22, 2016. There are unsubstantiated reports she was dropped off outside Enderby that day, about 28 km from the Sagmoen farm.
Ashley Simpson, 32, and Deanna Wertz, 46, were neighbours on the next county road over from the Sagmoen farm. They vanished in April and July of 2016, respectively.
Traci Genereaux, 18, disappeared from Vernon in May, and Nicole Bell of Malakwa, 31, has not been heard from since Sept. 2.