Home Uncategorized ‘Back to square 1’: Search for B.C. fugitives regrouping in Gillam

‘Back to square 1’: Search for B.C. fugitives regrouping in Gillam

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Face of Nation : The mayor of a northern Manitoba town that has been the focus of a massive hunt for two homicide suspects says he’s “baffled” after a tip about a possible sighting in a nearby community turned up nothing. 

“I guess we’re back to Square 1,” said Dwayne Forman, mayor of Gillam.  Forman had hoped that fugitives Bryer Schmegelsky and Kam McLeod, suspects in three homicides in northern B.C., would be caught after RCMP received a tip that two people matching their descriptions had been seen near the dump in York Landing, 90 kilometres away.

Heavily armed police, with assistance from the military, started scouring York Landing on Sunday, but never abandoned their search around Gillam. Despite “thorough and exhaustive” effort, police found no sign of the two men and began withdrawing from the community on Monday.

The RCMP said Tuesday it has cancelled its checkstop of every vehicle on the road leading into Gillam. Officers also concluded the door-to-door canvassing of more than 500 homes in Gillam and Fox Lake Cree Nation. Police have received more than 260 tips in the last week, according to a news release, but none has established any sightings of the pair outside the Gillam area.

Schmegelsky, 18, and McLeod, 19, have been on the run for more than a week. They’re suspects in the killings of Australian tourist Lucas Fowler and his American girlfriend, Chynna Deese, and are charged with second-degree murder in the death of University of British Columbia lecturer Leonard Dyck.

Their burnt-out vehicle was found northeast of Gillam on July 22. That same day, constables with Tataskweyak Cree Nation, also known as Split Lake, stopped the duo after they failed to stop their vehicle at an unrelated checkstop. The suspects, who were only considered missing persons at the time, weren’t recognized until later. While the police were searching in York Landing, the town’s roughly 500 residents were told to stay inside and lock their doors. The remote community is only accessible by air or by a two-hour boat ride.

Ten officers remained in York Landing overnight, and were expected to leave Tuesday morning, Chief Leroy Constant of York Factory First Nation, which is based in York Landing, posted on Facebook. “RCMP have notified us to remain vigilant and to report any information or tips you may have directly to the authorities,” Constant wrote.