Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP Still Looking For Boy's Remains 38 Years After He Was Murdered

The Canadian Press, 26 May, 2017 01:24 PM
    STEINBACH, Man. — RCMP have issued an appeal asking for the public's help in finding the remains of a 13-year-old boy who vanished in July 1978.
     
    David Wiebe was last seen by his mother, riding away from his home in Steinbach, Man., on his bicycle.
     
    In December 1994, RCMP arrested Wiebe’s friend Dale Goertzen when he was deported from the United States after serving 11 years in a Kansas prison for armed robbery.
     
    Goertzen pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in David's death and has been serving a life sentence ever since.
     
    However, David's remains have never been located and his siblings want to find them so he can be buried next to his parents.
     
    The Mounties drew attention to the case Thursday to mark National Missing Children’s Day.
     
    Sgt. Bobby Baker, head of the Missing and Exploited Persons Unit, told CTV News that Goertzen hasn’t exactly been uncooperative in the past, but more information is needed to nail down the whereabouts of the boy's remains.
     
    “Investigations do not collect dust,” said Baker. “Our investigators look at some of the hardest cases, ones that have not been solved in decades, or cases involving some of the most vulnerable people in society. We do not give up. Even after 38 years, we are optimistic we will be able to locate David and provide some closure to his family.”
     
    His older sister, Adel Shidel, recalled that David was supposed to come to a family barbecue that day but never showed up.
     
    "Everybody was looking for him — the whole town, I swear, was looking for him,” she said.
     
    Her mother and father have since passed away, but she said the family hasn't given up hope of finding David so he can be laid to rest.
     
    “We’d like to have a piece of him back,” Shidel said. “I think it would give a little peace back."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Party Leaders Square Off In First Debate Of Election Campaign

    VANCOUVER — The leaders of British Columbia's three main political parties sat around the same table for the first time in the provincial election today, zeroing in on jobs, the economy, government spending and housing in a live radio debate.

    B.C. Party Leaders Square Off In First Debate Of Election Campaign

    Liberal Party In British Columbia Gives Back Donations Worth Over $174,000

    Liberal Party In British Columbia Gives Back Donations Worth Over $174,000
    VANCOUVER — New reports released by Elections BC show the Liberal party returned almost $175,000 in political contributions it received in the last six years.

    Liberal Party In British Columbia Gives Back Donations Worth Over $174,000

    B.C. Police Watchdog Plans To Appeal Court Ruling Involving Suspended Chief

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's police watchdog will appeal a court ruling quashing parts of its investigation into misconduct allegations against Victoria's suspended police chief.

    B.C. Police Watchdog Plans To Appeal Court Ruling Involving Suspended Chief

    Lumber Train Derails On Northern Vancouver Island Injuring Two

    Lumber Train Derails On Northern Vancouver Island Injuring Two
    WOSS, B.C. — Two people have been hurt in a train derailment in Woss on northern Vancouver Island.

    Lumber Train Derails On Northern Vancouver Island Injuring Two

    Winnipeg Woman Convicted Of Storing Remains Of Six Infants Back In Court In July

    Winnipeg Woman Convicted Of Storing Remains Of Six Infants Back In Court In July
    WINNIPEG — A woman convicted of concealing the bodies of six infants in a Winnipeg storage locker is to be in court July 7 for a sentencing hearing.

    Winnipeg Woman Convicted Of Storing Remains Of Six Infants Back In Court In July

    How Ontario's New Foreign Homebuyer Tax Would Work

    How Ontario's New Foreign Homebuyer Tax Would Work
    A 15-per-cent non-resident speculation tax proposed by the Ontario government Thursday forms a key plank in the province's plan to cool the hot housing market in its southern cities.

    How Ontario's New Foreign Homebuyer Tax Would Work