New bus route along Highway of Tears offers safety
Vivan George, Anna George, and Marcie Quaw are all strangers, but their location in northern British Columbia makes it so they have a few things in common.
Vivan George, Anna George, and Marcie Quaw are all strangers, but their location in northern British Columbia makes it so they have a few things in common.
After schedule changes and delays, the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG) is set to begin hearings Tuesday in a community along the so-called Highway of Tears in B.C.
The Canadian Press Victoria — The small British Columbia Cheslatta Carrier Nation has a decades-long anguished…
APTN National News A report by the British Columbia privacy commissioner shows that senior government…
Grade 8 students from the Quinte Mohawk public school just released a compelling album called, The Problem.
APTN National News The mystery of what happened to so many women, mostly Aboriginal, who…
Kenneth Jackson APTN National News As calls for an inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women grow,…
The RCMP said Tuesday investigators had linked at least three “Highway of Tears” murders to a U.S. serial killer who died from lung cancer in 2006 while serving time in an Oregon prison.
An Oregon convict who died in 2006 from lung cancer while serving a 16-year sentence for kidnapping, assault and attempted rape has been linked to at least one murder in British Columbia, unsolved cases along the Highway of Tears and four other murders in Oregon.