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The Highway of Tears is a 719-kilometre (447 mi) corridor of Highway 16 between Prince George and Prince Rupert in British Columbia, Canada, which has been the location of crimes against many women, beginning in 1970 when the highway was completed.
The Unnatural and Accidental Women is a play by Metis playwright Marie Clements about the disappearance of multiple Indigenous women [1] from the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver whose deaths of extremely high blood-alcohol levels were all caused by one man, Gilbert Paul Jordan.
The task force was created during the Fall of 2005 in order to investigate a series of unsolved murders and disappearances along BC's Highway of Tears, and determine whether a serial killer or killers is operating there. In 2006, the Task Force took ownership of nine investigations. In 2007 the number of cases doubled from nine to eighteen. [2]
The term "Highway of Tears" refers to the 700 kilometres (430 mi) stretch of Highway 16 from Prince George to Prince Rupert, British Columbia, which has been the site of the murder and disappearance of a number of mainly Indigenous women since 1969. [73] [74] [29] In response to the Highway of Tears crisis, the RCMP in BC launched Project E ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Help. Pages in category "Highway of Tears" The following 13 ...
After consuming more alcohol at home, she took a taxi to a highway intersection outside the city, and told the driver she planned to hitch a ride to Jasper or Edmonton. She was armed with a knife, and her blood alcohol level was .165. [2] Later that day, Isaac shot her four times with a .22-caliber firearm and mutilated her body with a knife.
Katie Couric shared her daughters' emotional reaction after they read her depiction of their father, who died when they were very young, in her new memoir.
The Legebokoff case is covered in the 2015 documentary Highway of Tears. [21] Floridian writer J.T. Hunter profiled Legebokoff in the book The Country Boy Killer: The True Story of Cody Legebokoff, Canada's Teenage Serial Killer, published in 2015. [22] The case was the subject of the episode “Virtual Hitchhiking” in season 7 (ep.