July 30, 2019
[...]
'They were just telling me 'sorry'. I asked them where they came from. 'Vancouver' they told me. They looked scared.
'I spoke to the one with the mustache, Kam McLeod. He just kept saying, 'Sorry'. They didn't say where they were going.'
Saunders said he and his partner then inspected the vehicle.
'I told them I was going to do a quick search, and then I searched up,' Saunders said. 'They kept looking at each other. There was a couple of boxes in the back.'
Saunders only found survival gear and maps when he searched the car. He did not see any weaponry.
Saunders said, 'I told them to stop next time there's a situation like this, and they said 'yep' and 'sorry', and they went. They pulled into town, got some gas, then went. They were heading up towards Gillam.'
The pair did head to Gillam, a small town 100 miles east of Split Lake. The stolen RAV4 was discovered burnt out there on July 23.
As safety officers are unarmed and have no bullet-proof vests, Saunders said he felt he also had a close brush with death that day.
[...]
Saunder's cousin, Split Lake town councilor Robert Spence, described how the safety officers, also known as band constables, found nothing in the alleged killers' car.
He told DailyMailTV, 'Morgan was talking to the thinner one, Schmegelsky. He was quiet. Morgan said that they'd have to take a look around, check their vehicle for alcohol or drugs.
'But looking at the vehicle that they were driving in, the constable said all that was in there was survival gear, blankets and a lot of maps.
'They said that they were just going to come into the community, fuel up and head back out.'
Councillor Spence added that he believed the safety officers, unaware of the teens' alleged murder spree, were lucky to walk away with their lives.
'They were pretty freaked out about it. They said that anything could have happened, especially two constables that weren't equipped or supplied with personal protective gear,' he told DailyMailTV.
'[Spence and Saunders were] dressed just like you and I, just regular clothes, no uniforms, no guns, no pepper spray, no batons, no nothing,' he added.
'All they do is stop the vehicle traffic coming into the community checking for alcohol and drugs. They were pretty damn lucky they didn't get shot or killed for stopping those two individuals.'
Canadian safety officer describes letting teen serial killer suspects go after traffic stop | Daily Mail Online