Close X
Monday, February 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Search For Missing Quebec Businessman, Son Stretches Into Fifth Day

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jul, 2019 07:19 PM

    MONTREAL - Provincial police today dispatched a sonar-equipped boat to a reservoir to look for signs of a missing helicopter carrying a Quebec businessman and his teenage son who failed to return from a fishing trip last week.

     

    The search stretched into a fifth day for Stephane Roy and his 14-year-old son, who never reached their hometown of Ste-Sophie, Que., last Thursday. They were reported missing the next day.

     

    Roy is founder and owner of Les Serres Sagami Inc., which produces greenhouse-grown tomatoes and other produce under the Sagami and Savoura brand names.

     

    Canadian Forces search and rescue teams were airborne again today, assisted by the Canadian Coast Guard and civilian aerial search and rescue units.

     

    Capt. Trevor Reid says the search zone has been narrowed to about 12,000 square kilometres, and Griffon helicopters and Hercules planes are among the aircraft taking part.

     

    Reid says it's still a large area, but as evidence becomes available, co-ordinators at the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Trenton, Ont. are able to reduce the size of the search.

     

    Provincial police spokeswoman Helene Nepton says a weak iPhone signal captured last Wednesday may offer some additional clues of the missing pair's whereabouts.

     

    Nepton says the police boat was concentrating its search on an area of the Mitchinamecus reservoir not far from the chalet where Roy and his son stayed with two others.

     

    While there was a beacon on Roy's Robinson R44 helicopter, Reid said a distress call was never made.

     

    Roy and his son were scheduled to take off from Lac de la Bidiere, in the upper Laurentians regions, west of La Tuque, Que. last Wednesday around 12:30 p.m.

     

    The entrepreneur owned the R44 helicopter and according to a statement from his company, was an experienced pilot.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Supreme Court To Rule On Use Of Sexual History In Edmonton Assault Trial

    Supreme Court To Rule On Use Of Sexual History In Edmonton Assault Trial
    OTTAWA — A Supreme Court decision due this morning could clarify the law on how much of the history between a complainant and a person accused in a sexual-assault case can be brought into court.    

    Supreme Court To Rule On Use Of Sexual History In Edmonton Assault Trial

    Canada Puts Its Faith In Trump In High-stakes Meeting Between U.S., China

    Canada is pinning hopes for freedom for two Canadians detained in China since December on a meeting Donald Trump is to have with China's Xi Jinping tomorrow.

    Canada Puts Its Faith In Trump In High-stakes Meeting Between U.S., China

    Supreme Court Tells Judges To Take Care, Be Clear On Use Of 'Rape-shield' Law

    Supreme Court Tells Judges To Take Care, Be Clear On Use Of 'Rape-shield' Law
    OTTAWA — Canada's top court has issued a stern warning about allowing evidence of past sexual history in sex-assault trials, telling judges to be strict with jurors on how such details can be used.

    Supreme Court Tells Judges To Take Care, Be Clear On Use Of 'Rape-shield' Law

    Montreal's New Samuel De Champlain Bridge Officially Inaugurated

    Montreal's new Samuel de Champlain Bridge was officially inaugurated today, and will fully open to traffic on Canada Day.

    Montreal's New Samuel De Champlain Bridge Officially Inaugurated

    B.C. To Argue For Injunction On Alberta's Turn-off-the-taps Law In Calgary Court

    British Columbia's request for an injunction against Alberta's so-called turn-off-the-taps law is to be heard in a Calgary courtroom today.

    B.C. To Argue For Injunction On Alberta's Turn-off-the-taps Law In Calgary Court

    Canadians More Likely To Take Pride In The Present Than History: Poll

    Canadians More Likely To Take Pride In The Present Than History: Poll
    More Canadians take pride in the things that affect them today than they do in their country's history, a survey from the Association for Canadian Studies suggests.

    Canadians More Likely To Take Pride In The Present Than History: Poll