Close X
Saturday, September 21, 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

    Early Signs That Vancouver Housing Market Correction May Be Over: Royal Lepage

    Early Signs That Vancouver Housing Market Correction May Be Over: Royal Lepage
    The realtor released a report Tuesday saying Canada's two largest real estate markets continued their divergence in the first quarter of the year.

    Early Signs That Vancouver Housing Market Correction May Be Over: Royal Lepage

    Trial Begins For Calgary Man Accused Of Killing Wife, Burying Body In Basement

    Trial Begins For Calgary Man Accused Of Killing Wife, Burying Body In Basement
    CALGARY — The Crown says a Calgary man accused of killing his common-law wife confessed to undercover officers he strangled her and buried her body in the basement of the home they shared.

    Trial Begins For Calgary Man Accused Of Killing Wife, Burying Body In Basement

    Former Nova Scotia Teacher Wins Delay In Sentencing On Sex Charges

    Former Nova Scotia Teacher Wins Delay In Sentencing On Sex Charges
    HALIFAX — The sentencing of a former Nova Scotia junior high teacher who admitted to inappropriate contact with a student has been delayed.

    Former Nova Scotia Teacher Wins Delay In Sentencing On Sex Charges

    Omar Khadr's Criminal Record In Canada Shows 'Absolute Ignorance': Lawyer

    TORONTO — Omar Khadr's official criminal record in Canada contains oddities and errors that are at odds with how the federal government viewed him on his return from the notorious prison on the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

    Omar Khadr's Criminal Record In Canada Shows 'Absolute Ignorance': Lawyer

    Premier Clark Boasts About B.C.'s Low Jobless Rate, But Rural Areas Struggle

    Premier Clark Boasts About B.C.'s Low Jobless Rate, But Rural Areas Struggle
    VICTORIA — Premier Christy Clark often highlights the fact British Columbia has the lowest jobless rate in Canada, but rural and remote areas in the province are struggling with major industry downturns and job losses.

    Premier Clark Boasts About B.C.'s Low Jobless Rate, But Rural Areas Struggle

    Canada Tries To Strip Citizenship From Man Accused Of Butchering Villagers

    Canada Tries To Strip Citizenship From Man Accused Of Butchering Villagers
    Jorge Vinicio Sosa Orantes concealed his brutal role in a 1982 massacre by the Guatemalan military in obtaining Canadian citizenship a decade later, the federal government says in newly filed court documents.

    Canada Tries To Strip Citizenship From Man Accused Of Butchering Villagers