Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Want Help In Solving Mystery Of B.C. Toddler Who Went Missing In 1960

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 May, 2015 11:40 AM
  • Police Want Help In Solving Mystery Of B.C. Toddler Who Went Missing In 1960
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A police sketch artist has dipped a pen into the murky inkwell of the past in hopes of generating leads on a toddler who went missing 55 years ago.
 
Kamloops RCMP have released an age progression sketch of Edna Bette-Jean Masters, who disappeared in July 1960 while playing at a friend's house in the Red Lake area north of the city.
 
She was 21 months old and her family called her Bette-Jean. She would be 57 years old now.
 
Police reopened the case two years ago during a historic case review and have applied forensic art technology to create a picture of what Masters might look like as an adult.
 
It was completed using photos of her siblings, parents and snapshots taken of her as a child, said Cpl. Cheryl Bush. 
 
"The artists look at facial bone structures and they complete the sketch," she said, adding new techniques and processes that may not have existed back then were used, she said.
 
"That's why these cases are never closed."
 
Bush said it's "absolutely possible" the woman might be living somewhere without knowing about her past.
 
She said anyone who may have information or a memory that may be jarred by the photo should call police.
 
"Don't write anything off as seeming insignificant."
 
Police did not recover any evidence about what might have happened to the little girl. An extensive search by volunteers, officers, an airplane and a police dog was not fruitful.
 
Masters was wearing a green bonnet with white frill, pink short-sleeved T-shirt, faded pink overalls and sandals. She weighed about 11 kilograms and had curly blond hair, blue eyes and a fair complexion.

MORE National ARTICLES

Topless Pro-Abortion Protester Disrupts News Conference In Quebec As Archbishop Reads Pope's Message

Topless Pro-Abortion Protester Disrupts News Conference In Quebec As Archbishop Reads Pope's Message
QUEBEC — A bare-chested female activist disrupted a news conference in Quebec City today and denounced what she called anti-abortion legislation.

Topless Pro-Abortion Protester Disrupts News Conference In Quebec As Archbishop Reads Pope's Message

New Head Coach Jeff Tedford Says Tempo Will Be Key For B.C. Lions

SURREY, B.C. — B.C. Lions head coach Jeff Tedford stands in the middle of the field and shouts at no one in particular to get moving.

New Head Coach Jeff Tedford Says Tempo Will Be Key For B.C. Lions

Newfoundland And Labrador Raises Taxes, Fees In Election Year Budget

Newfoundland And Labrador Raises Taxes, Fees In Election Year Budget
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Taxpayers in Newfoundland and Labrador are going to pay more as the provincial government looks for ways to cope with a downturn in oil and commodity prices in the budget it tabled Thursday.

Newfoundland And Labrador Raises Taxes, Fees In Election Year Budget

NDP Ad Promotes Child Care Plan, Mulcair As Father, Grandfather

OTTAWA — Federal New Democrats are bringing out a new ad that gives glimpses into Tom Mulcair's personal life. The online ad is ostensibly aimed at promoting the party's $15-a-day national child care plan.

NDP Ad Promotes Child Care Plan, Mulcair As Father, Grandfather

Bell Won't Release Internal Report On Journalistic Independence At CTV

Bell Won't Release Internal Report On Journalistic Independence At CTV
TORONTO — An internal report on the journalistic independence of staff at CTV News will not be released to the public, says George Cope, the head of Bell Media's parent company BCE Inc.

Bell Won't Release Internal Report On Journalistic Independence At CTV

B.C. Didn't Infringe On Teachers' Contract Rights On Class Size: Appeal Court

B.C. Didn't Infringe On Teachers' Contract Rights On Class Size: Appeal Court
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's highest court has ruled the province did not violate teachers' charter rights, reversing two lower-court decisions in favour of a union that has fought for class size and composition clauses in its contracts.

B.C. Didn't Infringe On Teachers' Contract Rights On Class Size: Appeal Court