CANADA Canada - Leona Brule, 18, Fort Providence, NWT, 15 March 1989

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  • #1
Leona Mae Brule

leona-brule.jpg

Leona Mae Brule
Missing since March 15, 1989 from Fort Providence, Northwest Territories Canada
Classification: Endangered Missing

Vital Statistics
    • Date Of Birth: May 29, 1970
    • Age at Time of Disappearance: 18 years old
    • Height and Weight: 4'6", 106 lbs.
    • Distinguishing Characteristics: Brown hair; brown eyes.
    • Marks, Scars: Brule has a circular-shaped scar on her upper right cheek.
Circumstances of Disappearance
Leona was 18 years old when her mother reported her missing from Fort Providence, Northwest Territories in March 1989. Leona was living a transient lifestyle and her mother had not heard from her in over a year. Drug and alcohol abuse are suspected. There have been unconfirmed reports that Leona was living on the streets in Edmonton, Alberta in the early 1990s as well as an unconfirmed link to Florida. Leona worked as a live-in nanny in Fort Providence in 1989 and would often travel to Edmonton to visit her boyfriend. A tip led authorities to meet up with a woman in Fort Providence who looked like Leona but it turned out to not be her. Her disappearance is considered "suspicious" and Leona remains missing.

Investigators
If you have any information concerning Brule's whereabouts, please contact:
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
867-699-3291

All information may be submitted on an anonymous basis.

NCIC Number: M-791163172

The Doe Network: Case File 247DFNWT
Justice for Native People: Leona Brule, Missing from Northwest Territories since 1989.
https://www.cbc.ca/missingandmurdered/mmiw/profiles/leona-mae-brule
 
  • #2
Leona Brule would sew outfits and toys for her two-year-old niece Vanessa when she had a moment free. She was reported missing from Fort Providence, N.W.T., in March 1989. The 18-year-old had been working as a live-in nanny and travelling back and forth to Edmonton to visit her boyfriend. Brule eventually stopped coming home to see her mom, and after about a year, her mother filed a police report. RCMP believe she was living on the streets in Edmonton in the 1990s, but she has never been found. Her case remains open.

Before Leona Brule disappeared in 1989, the 18-year-old woman would sew outfits and toys for her two-year-old niece Vanessa when she had a moment free from her work as a live-in nanny.

“She just brightens the room, got that personality when she just walked in and you can approach her and talk to her,” said Barb Brule, Leona’s older sister.

The details surrounding Leona’s disappearance are foggy.

She was working as a nanny in Fort Providence, N.W.T, for at least three months in 1989. Her sister also knows she was travelling to Edmonton to visit a boyfriend.

Beyond that, they aren’t sure.

“I remember hearing when I was younger, from my mom’s brother, that she’d gone to a party with some people and that was one of the last places she’d been seen,” said Vanessa Brule, Leona’s niece.

“She’d gone out with some people, and she’d left the party some point in the evening with some other people, and she hadn’t been seen after that point.”

It would take about a year for her mom to formally report her missing, and RCMP said there is some evidence she was seen on the streets in Edmonton during the early 1990s. Other than that, her family has little to go on.

Officers are in touch with the family on a regular basis now, but weren’t for many years, according to Barb.

A recent case of a missing woman being found may have sparked interest, she thinks.

So far, they’re satisfied with the investigation.

There have been times when “one year, they thought they traced her to Fort McPherson, and someone said she looks like her. They approached this woman at a hotel, and it wasn’t her,” said Barb.

Officers have taken DNA from the family, but so far, nothing.

“Her health and social insurance number hasn’t been used,” said Barb.

As for a national inquiry, Leona’s niece Vanessa wants one.

“I was only about two when Leona had gone missing, and growing up, I had a lot of questions about where she’d gone and what had happened,” said Vanessa.

“I don’t think there was ever a lot of attention brought to it ... [An inquiry should] raise awareness that the rates of aboriginal women going missing and their deaths is quite high.”

https://www.cbc.ca/missingandmurdered/mmiw/profiles/leona-mae-brule
 
  • #3
The Disappearance of Leona Brule

February 19, 2020

EARLY LIFE:
Leona Brule was born on May 29, 1970 in Fort Providence, Northwest Territories. A member of a family that included her parents and sisters, she was constantly surrounded by love while living in the small northern community.

Growing up, Leona was known for her determined and outgoing spirit. She had the ability to light up a room, and her friendly and trustable personality made her very approachable. She was known for being fiercely protective of her siblings and cousins, and enjoyed picking berries with her mother, Earnestine Brule, and her aunt, Catherine Sanderson.

As a teenager, Leona began to explore what life had to offer outside of Fort Providence. As such, she began to frequently travel to Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. Her sister would eventually move there and Leona began work as her live-in nanny. She adored her niece, Vanessa Brule, often sewing toys and outfits for the then two-year-old girl.

Leona’s boyfriend in the late 1980s resided in Edmonton and she would visit him regularly. Since she didn’t own a vehicle, she would often hitchhike to Alberta’s capital city. However, whether she was in Edmonton or Yellowknife, she would keep in frequent contact with her family and always returned to her home in Fort Providence.

DISAPPEARANCE:
The details surrounding Leona’s disappearance are foggy, with only a few details known. For the majority of her family, their last contact with her was in the fall of 1988, when she was 18 years old. She had briefly visited Fort Providence before making the trek to Edmonton and had promised her family she would be back in one week’s time. She never did return home.

According to family members living in Edmonton, their last contact with Leona, then 19 years old, was in March 1989. Her disappearance didn’t register with the family at first, as it was felt Leona would eventually return. In October 1989, a year since she was last in Fort Providence and after no contact with her immediate family, her mother filed a missing persons report with the local detachment of the RCMP.

INVESTIGATION:
Both her family and investigators have very little to go on in regards to Leona’s disappearance. The RCMP says the primary difficulty investigators face is they don’t have a solid timeline of the missing woman’s whereabouts in 1989. They don’t know where she went missing from or what she was wearing at the time.

At the time, Leona was living a transient lifestyle, which investigators deemed as high risk. As such, her disappearance was deemed suspicious. While drug and alcohol use is suspected due to this, it hasn’t been confirmed.

Given her family’s sightings of Leona in Edmonton, the RCMP believes she may have been living on the city’s streets in the 1990s. However, she has not been seen since the 1989 sightings.

At one point, investigators thought they’d tracked the missing woman down in Fort McPherson, Northwest Territories. Reports had come in saying someone who resembled Leona was staying at a hotel in the area. When approached, it was determined that the woman was not Leona.

According to Vanessa, her uncle has said that her aunt had gone to a party with others. At some point during the evening, she’d left with a group of people. However, this version of events has not been substantiated.

After Leona’s disappearance, her aunt received a letter from Florida. In it was a newspaper clipping with a note that suggested she use the page to help her lose weight, as she’d been overweight when she’d last been in contact with her niece. Unsure of who had sent it, she passed it on to the authorities.

Leona’s health card and social insurance number have not been used since her disappearance.

In 2018, the RCMP renewed their call for leads in the case by posting call-to-actions on their social media accounts. As of 2020, her case remains open and the RCMP has familial DNA on file, should they need it. Officers are in regular contact with the family, who say they’re satisfied with the investigation thus far.

THEORIES:
1) The current theory in the case is that Leona met with some form of foul play. Some feel she may have been picked up by someone with nefarious intentions while hitchhiking around Yellowknife, while others feel she encountered foul play during her stay in Edmonton. Her aunt worries someone may have taken advantage of her kind nature. Due to a lack of evidence and leads in the case, all those involved in the investigation can do is speculate.

AFTERMATH:
Leona’s mother has since passed away. According to the family, she became reserved after her daughter’s disappearance.

Vanessa was an advocate for Canada’s inquiry into the nation’s missing and murdered Indigenous women. She feels her aunt’s case didn’t receive enough attention and, as a result, there are many unanswered questions.

CASE CONTACT INFORMATION:
Leona Mae Brule was last seeing Edmonton, Alberta in March 1989. She was 19 years old, and is known to have used the aliases “Jodie Summers” and “Leona Mae Summers”. What she was wearing is currently unknown. At the time of her disappearance, she stood at 4’6″ with a medium build and weighed 106 pounds. She has brown-to-black curly hair and brown eyes. She has a burn scar on her left hand and a circular-shaped scar on her upper right cheek. According to dental records, seven of her teeth have received treatment and five are absent. Her ears are pierced.

Currently, the case is classified as endangered missing. If alive, she would be 49 years old.

If you have any information regarding the case, you can contact the Fort Providence RCMP detachment at 867-699-1111. Tips can also be submitted anonymously via Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

The Disappearance of Leona Brule
 
  • #4
  • #5

On March 15, 1989, Leona Brule was seen for the last time in Fort Providence, Northwest Territories. During the time of her disappearance, Leona was leading a high-risk, and transient lifestyle. She may have spent sometime in Edmonton, Alberta and Florida, USA.

Aliases SUMMERS, Jodie
SUMMERS, Leona Mae

Missing since March 15, 1989
Year of birth 1970
Age at Disappearance 18
Gender Female
Bio group Indigenous
Eye colour Brown
Hair Black, Curly
Teeth Dental records indicate 7 teeth treated, 5 absent.
Height 137cm / 4ft 6in
Weight 48kg / 106lb
Build Medium

Pierce Ears
Scar Left Hand, Burn






Notable: Leona has a circular-shaped scar on her upper right cheek, a burn scar on her left hand. Her ears are pierced.

There were some unconfirmed reports that Leona had been seen in Edmonton, Alberta and Florida, USA. A tip led authorities to a woman who had looked like Leona, however she turned out to not be her. Her disappearance is considered suspicious.
 

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