Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Funeral today for young Quebec sisters found dead following Amber Alert

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jul, 2020 05:12 PM
  • Funeral today for young Quebec sisters found dead following Amber Alert

A funeral will be held in the Quebec City area Monday for two young sisters who were found dead following an Amber Alert.

The bodies of Norah and Romy Carpentier, aged 11 and 6, were found in the woods on July 11 in St-Apollinaire, southwest of the provincial capital.

Their father, who was suspected of abducting them, remains missing.

Quebec provincial police suspended their ground search for 44-year-old Martin Carpentier over the weekend after 10 days of searching but say they remain determined to find him.

Police believe Carpentier and his daughters were involved in a car crash on July 8, but nobody was inside the vehicle when responders reached the scene.

The funeral in Levis, Que., will be limited to family due to COVID-19 concerns, but screens will be set up outside for others who want to attend.

The family posted a message on the funeral home's website to thank all the police, emergency responders and volunteers who did everything they could to bring the girls home.

To Norah and Romy, they wrote: "We will always regret not having had more than the 11 and six springtimes you were present in our lives, but the memories and love you gave us will remain etched in us forever."

A senior provincial police spokesman said Monday that if Martin Carpentier is still alive, he has likely almost run out of resources.

Police had intensified their search on Thursday after alleging the fugitive had taken items from a trailer within the search perimeter to help his survival.

But Chief Insp. Guy Lapointe said Monday that four days have passed since then, and investigators believe Carpentier is ill-equipped to ensure his basic needs for an extended period.

Police say if he is alive, Carpentier's physical appearance has likely changed, and he may be weak, distressed and unable to make rational decisions.

Lapointe said it would be extremely difficult for anyone to survive in a dense forest for so long, let alone when they are the subject of an intense manhunt.

MORE National ARTICLES

U.S. policy triggers Harvard lawsuit, could expel thousands of Canadian students

U.S. policy triggers Harvard lawsuit, could expel thousands of Canadian students
Questions over whether thousands of international students could be deported from the U.S. under a new Trump administration policy are causing consternation among school officials and anxiety among Canadians studying south of the border.

U.S. policy triggers Harvard lawsuit, could expel thousands of Canadian students

Racist slurs mar Conservative debate

Racist slurs mar Conservative debate
The litany of racial slurs inserted into the comments section of an online Conservative leadership debate Wednesday was not surprising, candidate Leslyn Lewis said the next day.

Racist slurs mar Conservative debate

How parents can pass on citizenship changing

How parents can pass on citizenship changing
The Liberal government is updating a legal definition of "parent" to make it easier for some parents to pass their Canadian citizenship onto their children.

How parents can pass on citizenship changing

Confusion, frustration around student program

Confusion, frustration around student program
Anxious students and non-profit groups say they're frustrated over a lack of answers from the federal government as they wait to hear what will happen to the $900-million volunteering program previously administered by the WE Charity.

Confusion, frustration around student program

Jamie Bacon pleads guilty in Surrey Six case

Jamie Bacon pleads guilty in Surrey Six case
Reputed gang leader Jamie Bacon has pleaded guilty to a charge stemming from shootings in 2007 that left six people dead at a highrise apartment building in Surrey, B.C.

Jamie Bacon pleads guilty in Surrey Six case

Canada joins 22 nations in ocean protection

Canada joins 22 nations in ocean protection
Canada has joined an international group of nearly two dozen other countries working to protect the world's oceans.

Canada joins 22 nations in ocean protection