National trek looks to raise awareness for missing and murdered Aboriginal women
Family members of missing and murdered Aboriginal women are preparing for a trek across the country.
Family members of missing and murdered Aboriginal women are preparing for a trek across the country.
Relatives trying to solve a 20 year-old mystery of a vanished family may have new hope and a new lead.
It is a mystery 20 years in the making.
The RCMP said Tuesday investigators had linked at least three “Highway of Tears” murders to a U.S. serial killer who died from lung cancer in 2006 while serving time in an Oregon prison.
An Oregon convict who died in 2006 from lung cancer while serving a 16-year sentence for kidnapping, assault and attempted rape has been linked to at least one murder in British Columbia, unsolved cases along the Highway of Tears and four other murders in Oregon.
An Oregon convict who died in 2006 from lung cancer while serving a 16-year sentence for kidnapping, assault and attempted rape has been linked to at least one murder in British Columbia, unsolved cases along the Highway of Tears and four other murders in Oregon.
The RCMP is expected to announce a major development in the ongoing investigation into the death and disappearance of women along the infamous Highway of Tears.
It has been six years since the British Columbia city of Prince George hosted the Highway of Tears symposium.
APTN National News A series of healing ceremonies recently concluded in B.C. As APTN’s Tina…