Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Australian Police Seek Leads In Case Of Saskatchewan Man Who Vanished 45 Years Ago

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Apr, 2015 12:27 PM
    BEACHPORT, Australia — Police in South Australia are hoping to stir up new leads in the case of a Saskatchewan man who vanished 45 years ago while on a working holiday there.
     
    Investigators say Gordon Rogers was last seen at a party in the town of Beachport, about 400 kilometres southeast of Adelaide, in the early morning hours of Aug. 2, 1970. He was 20 at the time.
     
    Police say they suspect he was murdered.
     
    Now a $200,000 reward is being offered to anyone who provides information that leads to his remains or an arrest in the case.
     
    Rogers' disappearance is among more than 100 cold cases featured in a campaign that South Australian police say has generated hundreds of tips since February.
     
    They say Rogers arrived in Sydney on a 12-month visa in March 1970 and travelled a bit before taking a labourer job with the Woods and Forest Department.
     
    Police say he planned to work with the department for six weeks before travelling to New Zealand.
     
    The night he disappeared, Rogers was at a party with a friend who then left to take his girlfriend home, police said. The friend asked another man to take Rogers home.
     
    That man later told authorities he took a woman home and when he returned to the party, Rogers was gone.
     
    Police say no one has seen or heard from him since.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    One Dead, Another Injured After House Explodes In Northeastern Toronto

    One Dead, Another Injured After House Explodes In Northeastern Toronto
    TORONTO — Police have identified a man who died in an explosion that levelled a house in northeastern Toronto as 57-year-old Paul Zigomanis.

    One Dead, Another Injured After House Explodes In Northeastern Toronto

    Mediterranean Migrant Deaths Worth Risk: Man Who Boarded Thai Ship For Canada

    Mediterranean Migrant Deaths Worth Risk: Man Who Boarded Thai Ship For Canada
    VANCOUVER — A young Sri Lankan man crammed into the cargo hold of a ship with nearly 500 others had only one thing on his mind — getting to the promised land called Canada.

    Mediterranean Migrant Deaths Worth Risk: Man Who Boarded Thai Ship For Canada

    Budget Will Make Pilot Immigrant Loan Program Permanent

    Budget Will Make Pilot Immigrant Loan Program Permanent
    OTTAWA — More newcomers will have access to federal loans to help get their professional training up to Canadian standards as part of today’s federal budget.

    Budget Will Make Pilot Immigrant Loan Program Permanent

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati
    VANCOUVER — Ross Rebagliati says he's been waiting 17 years for marijuana to go mainstream, and he's convinced the issue is so hot that politicians will be forced to address legalization in the upcoming federal election.

    Pot Hot, Must Get Aired In Federal Election: Olympic Medallist Ross Rebagliati

    Family Thanks Stranger Who Donated Liver To Three-Year-Old Kingston Girl

    Family Thanks Stranger Who Donated Liver To Three-Year-Old Kingston Girl
    TORONTO — The father of three-year-old Kingston, Ont., twins who underwent potentially life-saving liver transplants couldn't hold back tears as he thanked the anonymous donor who made the surgery possible for the second girl.

    Family Thanks Stranger Who Donated Liver To Three-Year-Old Kingston Girl

    B.C. Argues Site C Environmental Approval Process Was Above Board

    B.C. Argues Site C Environmental Approval Process Was Above Board
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for the B.C. government is defending the province's decision to issue environmental approval for the Site C dam.

    B.C. Argues Site C Environmental Approval Process Was Above Board