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Serpo
10th June 2012, 04:59 AM
Highway of Tears: Mystery of the 800-mile stretch of Canadian road where up to 43 women have gone missing in 30 years and could be victims of serial killer

No suspect has been found in disappearances stretching back decades
Remote wilderness creates danger for hitchhiking young women


By Daily Mail Reporter (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Daily+Mail+Reporter)
PUBLISHED: 23:00 GMT, 9 June 2012 | UPDATED: 23:51 GMT, 9 June 2012


(http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2156982/Highway-Tears-The-mystery-Canadas-missing-women.html#comments)








It has been dubbed the Highway of Tears.

Mystery surrounds one of the remotest stretches of highway in Canada after nearly 50 women are believed to have gone missing there in the past 30 years.
Many believe that the disappearances along Highway 16, which runs between Prince George and Prince Rupert in British Columbia, are the work of a twisted serial killer who preys on young women.
But police have never identified a suspect in the case, and some say the women were simply victims of Canada's harsh and remote wilderness.


http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-0-13882B38000005DC-805_634x475.jpg Location: A section of Highway 16, which runs between Prince George and Prince Rupert in British Columbia, where many women have disappeared


http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13882B11000005DC-36_634x729.jpg Unexplained: Madison Scott, 20, vanished near the infamous road on May 28, 2011 after attending a party

Most recently, 20-year-old Madison Scott vanished near the infamous road on May 28, 2011 after attending a party. Police located her tent and truck, but the young woman remains missing.

A year later, Madison’s parents are still struggling to cope with her disappearance and are offering $100,000 for information leading to an arrest in the case.
'After a long and difficult year, and despite an ongoing and in depth RCMP [Royal Canadian Mounted Police] investigation, in addition to the ongoing searches, awareness campaigns and pleas from her family and friends for her safe return, there has been no real evidence of what happened to Maddy,' Sandra Kelly Klassen, Madison's aunt, wrote on a website (http://madisonscott.ca/)dedicating to finding her.

More...

Was she MURDERED? Mystery continues in case of dentist's wife found dead beneath broken third floor window (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2156863/Was-MURDERED-Mystery-continues-case-dentists-wife-dead-beneath-broken-floor-window.html)
Police search LA family's home in the hunt for Hollywood executive missing for a month (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2156849/Gavin-Smith-Police-search-LA-familys-home-hunt-missing-Hollywood-executive.html)


'The family and their team of supporters continue to be hopeful that anyone with information will come forward - someone knows where she is but they have not come forward with the truth.'
Hannah White, a reporter with the Vanderhoof Omineca Express, told the Daily Beast (http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/07/10/canada-s-highway-of-tears-why-are-women-disappearing.html) last year that Madison's disappearance rocked the community. 'The whole town is still in complete shock and no one knows what to think,' she said.

‘She really had her head screwed on. We don’t think she just wandered off drunk and fell into the lake. It is completely off character. I don’t know if they will ever find her at this point.’

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13882A80000005DC-77_306x423.jpg
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13882A73000005DC-230_306x423.jpg

Missing: Nicole Hoar, 25, who last seen in Prince George in June 2002, left, and Tamara Chipman, 22, whose body still hasn't been found, right.






http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13882AE4000005DC-12_306x423.jpg
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13882B30000005DC-785_306x423.jpg

Unsolved: Lana Derrick, who was last seen in October 1995, left, and Roxanne Thiara, 15, whose body was found in August 1994, one month after she disappeared, right.



http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13882A88000005DC-179_306x423.jpg
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13882A8D000005DC-319_306x423.jpg

Victims: Delphine Nikkal, 16, was last seen in June 1990 along Highway 16, left, and Alberta Williams, 24, whose body was discovered along the infamous road one month after she disappeared in August 1989, right.


Although authorities say the number of women who have gone missing along the stretch of road stands at 18, aboriginal leaders say it is closer to 43 (http://extraordinaryintelligence.com/5433/the-unexplained/highway-of-tears-vanishing-women-of-british-columbia/).
Police have said that eight of the disappearances in particular appear to have been linked, and may be the work of one individual.
The sole breakthrough in the mysterious case came in April last year, when police released a sketch of an elderly man who attempted to kidnap a 20-year-old woman near Highway 16 - however, he has not been found.
KNOWN VICTIMS OF THE HIGHWAY OF TEARS... BUT ARE THERE MORE?AieLah Saric Auger, 14, 2006
Tamara Chipman, 22, 2005
Nicole Hoar, 25, 2002
Lana Derrick, 19, 1995
Ramona Wilson, 16, 1994
Roxanne Thiara, 15, 1994
Leah Alishia Germaine, 15, 1994
Delphine Nikkal, 16, 1990
Cecilia Anne Nikal, age unknown, 1989
Alberta Williams, 24, 1989
Shelly-Ann Bacsu, 16, 1983
Maureen Mosie, 33, 1981
Monica Jack, 12, 1978
Colleen MacMillen, 16, 1974
Monica Ignas, 14, 1974

Gale Ann Weys, 19, 1973
Pamela Darlington, 19, 1973
Micheline Pare, 18, 1970
Gloria Moody, 27, 1969


Many of the women who have gone missing along the highway live in aboriginal communities and use hitchhiking as a mode of transport, which authorities said could have made them easy targets.

Local women have been urged to avoid hitchhiking, though many in poorer communities cannot afford an alternative method of travelling.
‘It could just be that some sick people up there realize that women hitchhiking alone are easy picking,’ said Chris Freimond, a spokesperson for the government-funded Missing Women Commission of Inquiry, which has been holding informal hearings about the disappearances and murders for the past eight months.

‘Towns are far apart and there are long stretches of road. Sometimes the radio fades out and there is no cell service.

'There are logging roads off every highway. If someone has bad intentions, you will find a victim. Someone can go off and drive for an hour and throw a body into a ravine and they would never be found.’

But many people have argued that the disappearances were not properly investigated until 25-year-old Nicole Hoar, a white tree-planter, went missing in 2002, prompting criticism from the families of aboriginal victims.
'Many of them were aboriginal and some of the talk out there was that people cared more about the non-aboriginal girls going missing,' Lorna Brown, the aunt of 22-year-old Tamara Chipman, who went missing in September 2005, told the Daily Beast.

'Those families felt like they weren’t taken seriously.'
Because of the lack of answers that investigations have brought forward, some people have taking it upon themselves to try to solve the mystery.


http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13883708000005DC-780_634x422.jpg Caution: A poster serves as a warning, telling women there is a killer on the loose on the road that has been dubbed the Highway of Tears



http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/06/09/article-2156982-13882AEC000005DC-771_634x609.jpg Tragic: A map of the disappearances and homicides that have occurred along Highway 16
Ray Michalko, Vancouver-based private investigator, began investigating the disappearances in 2006. He told the Daily Beast: ‘Police weren’t doing much and I get along well with the aboriginal people and I thought a non-cop could work.’
But his efforts have have gone unrewarded so far - even though he spends at least 40 hours a week chasing leads - and the disappearances remain a mystery.
The same goes for the case of Madison Scott. 'This investigation remains a priority for North District Major Crime,' Cst. Lesley Smith, North District Media Relations Officer, said on the anniversary of the young woman's disappearance.

'We believe that there is information out there and it is our hope that someone will come forward to help us determine what happened. The police need information and Maddy’s family need answers.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2156982/Highway-Tears-The-mystery-Canadas-missing-women.html#ixzz1xOIZlU4B

gunDriller
10th June 2012, 07:08 AM
doesn't sound like a coincidence to me.

Gaillo
10th June 2012, 02:07 PM
In my early 20's, I had a girlfriend who went hitchhiking in Canada, along that same stretch of road in B.C.
She was picked up by a guy in an old pickup truck, driven to the woods, raped, stabbed, and left for dead. She managed to get to the hospital after waving down a car, despite having a big bleeding stab wound in her neck. She gave the authorities full descriptions of everything, the guy, the truck, etc. They never arrested anyone or caught the guy. This all happened a few years before I met her, it left her pretty messed up in the head. We didn't go out for long...

I'm guessing it was probably the same guy who did at least some of the stuff in the OP.

Serpo
10th June 2012, 02:20 PM
Thanks Gallio for that shocking info,,looks as though they are not that interested in catching this guy.

ShortJohnSilver
10th June 2012, 02:31 PM
Thanks Gallio for that shocking info,,looks as though they are not that interested in catching this guy.

Wait 15 years, there will be a deathbed confession it was the RCMP agent's mildly retarded brother or whatnot.

Spectrism
10th June 2012, 04:43 PM
That is the kind of cop I wouldn't mind being- a detective hunting down monsters like that. It would give me great pleasure to nab a beast that did such things. I am a strong believer in sting operations. In a case like this, it would be very dangerous for the bait.

Twisted Titan
10th June 2012, 08:23 PM
If they had good Gun Laws............ this would not have happened

Cebu_4_2
11th June 2012, 04:36 AM
If they had no Gun Laws............ this would not have happened

Fixed it for you.