Times Colonist

Manhunt raising eyebrows: advocate

- KELLY GERALDINE MALONE

WINNIPEG — Helicopter­s and a specialize­d military aircraft scoured from the air while armed police took to the ground over northern Manitoba in a hunt for two men who are suspects in three killings in British Columbia.

Some advocates say it’s a stark contrast to resources applied to searches for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

“It is a little bit eyebrow raising because of the different response,” says Sheila North, a former grand chief and advocate for missing and murdered Indigenous women.

“The effort that they are going through to try and find them could trigger a lot of things for people who do their own searches.”

The massive manhunt has gripped the country since Bryer Schmegelsk­y, 18, and Kam McLeod, 19, of Port Alberni, were named last week as suspects in three killings. Vancouver researcher Leonard Dyck and Australian Lucas Fowler and his American girlfriend Chynna Deese were found dead last month in northern B.C.

In an email Thursday, RCMP spokespers­on Sgt. Marie Damian said solving the cases of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls is a priority for RCMP and officers investigat­e them on a daily basis. The search in northern Manitoba involves a “potential imminent danger to Canadians at large,” she said. “To compare the resources being devoted to an isolated emergency, and those devoted to an ongoing issue, would be inappropri­ate.”

The RCMP said it’s too early to estimate the cost of the ongoing search.

North said it’s important the suspects are caught because they could pose a serious risk to the public. But she wonders where the same sense of urgency is when an Indigenous woman or girl can’t be found.

North recalls the case of Jennifer Catcheway in 2008. She was last seen in Portage la Prairie, Man., on the night of her 18th birthday. When Wilfred and Bernice Catcheway notified police their daughter was missing, they were told she was probably out partying, North said.

For more than a decade, the Catcheways have conducted their own search of rivers, lakes, forests and nearby First Nations.

North said there are more than 1,200 relatives of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls watching as Mounties do everything they can to find the two murder suspects. They may also be wondering why they couldn’t have received more help, she adds. “Families that do their own searches are feeling a little bit let down and not respected in the same way as these other families are,” she said.

 ??  ?? Sheila North, a former grand chief, says there are more than 1,200 relatives of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls watching as the RCMP does everything it can to find suspects Bryer Schmegelsk­y, 18, and Kam McLeod, 19, of Port Alberni.
Sheila North, a former grand chief, says there are more than 1,200 relatives of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls watching as the RCMP does everything it can to find suspects Bryer Schmegelsk­y, 18, and Kam McLeod, 19, of Port Alberni.

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