Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP Say Disappearance Of B.C. Cowboy Ben Tyner 'May Involve Criminality'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Mar, 2019 07:05 PM

    SURREY, B.C. — The case of a rancher who has been missing in British Columbia since January is being treated as a suspicious disappearance by the RCMP.


    Sgt. Janelle Shoihet says members of the southeast district major crime unit have reviewed the evidence that has been collected since went missing and have determined the case may involve criminal activity.


    Tyner, who is 32, was the manager of the Nicola Ranch, about 300 kilometres northeast of Vancouver, and was last seen on Jan. 26 as he rode out on horseback, possibly to search for cattle in the surrounding hills.


    He was reported missing two days later when his saddled horse was found wandering on a logging road off Highway 97 northwest of Merritt.


    An extensive search that included RCMP and volunteers on foot and horseback, as well as in helicopters, vehicles and snowmobiles, found no trace of Tyner.


    Shoihet says early on investigators requested assistance from major crime detectives, but until this week police had said their was no indication of foul play.


    "Now having had the opportunity to review all the pieces, we believe that the circumstances surrounding Mr. Tyner’s disappearance may involve criminality," Shoihet said Tuesday.


    Shoihet would not reveal details but she said the latest announcement "reinvigorates" the investigation.


    Officers are asking people who may have information but haven't spoken to police to come forward.


    "That one missing piece might be something you think is insignificant, but could really be the turn-key piece of information for an investigation like this," Shoihet said in a telephone interview.


    Before they left for their home in Wyoming in mid-February, Tyner's family renewed their plea for any tips that might help the police investigation into his disappearance.


    "Our hearts are shattered and our lives have been thrown into turmoil,"Tyner's mother Jennifer told a news conference at the time.


    "To think that I will never again see his smile, or hear his infectious laugh, never see him realize his dreams, never have him wrap his arms around me again, is unthinkable."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor
    A medical health officer in Vancouver says measles is not expected to spread beyond a cluster of patients but anyone travelling to other parts of the world

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia
    OROMOCTO, N.B. — The Canadian Armed Forces has released the name of a soldier and Afghanistan veteran found dead at New Brunswick's Gagetown base on Monday.    

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia

    B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments

    B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments
    VICTORIA — British Columbia is amending consumer protection law to offer more safeguards for people forced to turn to high-cost loan services and risk being caught in an endless cycle of debt payments.

    B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments

    Liberals' Bump In Child Benefits Fuels Poverty Rate Drop, Statistics Canada Says

    OTTAWA — The national statistics office says fewer children are living in poverty and it is connecting the drop to the Liberal government's signature child benefit.

    Liberals' Bump In Child Benefits Fuels Poverty Rate Drop, Statistics Canada Says

    Former Guantanamo Bay Prisoner Omar Khadr Wants Court To Rule Sentence Expired

    EDMONTON — Former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Omar Khadr is asking an Alberta court to declare his eight-year sentence for war crimes to have expired.

    Former Guantanamo Bay Prisoner Omar Khadr Wants Court To Rule Sentence Expired

    Crown Seeks Six Years For Ontario Man Pamir Hakimzadah Who Tried To Join ISIL In Syria

    TORONTO — Ontario prosecutors want a Toronto man who tried to join Islamic State militants in Syria to be sentenced to six years behind bars.    

    Crown Seeks Six Years For Ontario Man Pamir Hakimzadah Who Tried To Join ISIL In Syria