The vegetation directly around the truck is burnt. Also don't forget the truck was spotted on fire so it safe to assume they were able to get it doused fast enoughThere’s something very unusual about this photo of the burned truck which doesn’t make any sense. Notice the vegetation and trees including the green weeds right behind the truck box which the camper was sitting atop of...that reportedly melted due to the high intensity heat? JMO but the site of the burning truck and camper can’t have been exactly where some of the media reports state, at the same site as this photo. I think it was towed out of the deeper bush.
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B.C. teens charged with 2nd-degree murder as Canada-wide manhunt continues
LOL I think I'll wait and see if the RCMP "confirm" it. LOLExtracts from the article:
“I will confirm these two individuals did stop in to my business for haircuts early Friday afternoon (July 19),” remarked the owner of a local hair salon.
Early pictures of the truck show it with the hood closed. It’s only after they started processing the truck that images, with the yellow evidence markers, show it with the hood open.
It was found on fire in the afternoon. So most likely noon is the earliest they left the Dease Lake location.
Does anybody have the ETA for an RCMP update of their findings?
It was an old Dodge. Appears to be a 1992 model.
Ya this is why I was wanting to see the front of it. I was wondering if they wrecked it somehow and were stranded (hence the hitchhiking). The frame just looked off a bit in the front from the few angles I have seen, then I started to notice I couldn't find any front views after it was burned out.
Edit: My husband throwing out the theory they tried fixing it (why the hood is up) and ended up starting it on fire instead. Or if LD tried helping them and same thing happened and they took it out on him for losing everything.
Not sure if this has been shared already, but I think I saw someone asking about why they hadn’t been spotted in gas stations en route? Apparently, these photos of Kam were taken at Abasand Esso in Fort Mcmurry, Alberta
Not sure if this has been shared already, but I think I saw someone asking about why they hadn’t been spotted in gas stations en route? Apparently, these photos of Kam were taken at Abasand Esso in Fort Mcmurry, Alberta
Not sure if this has been shared already, but I think I saw someone asking about why they hadn’t been spotted in gas stations en route? Apparently, these photos of Kam were taken at Abasand Esso in Fort Mcmurry, Alberta
I haven't seen that before. Thank you!
This IMHO speaks a lot to their route (It reports them as being in Fairview, AB). It looks to me like they didn't go through Dawson Creek, but cut across on 64, from Fort St. John, BC, on the Alaska Highway.
Not sure if this has been shared already, but I think I saw someone asking about why they hadn’t been spotted in gas stations en route? Apparently, these photos of Kam were taken at Abasand Esso in Fort Mcmurry, Alberta
Not sure if this has been shared already, but I think I saw someone asking about why they hadn’t been spotted in gas stations en route? Apparently, these photos of Kam were taken at Abasand Esso in Fort Mcmurry, Alberta
First off, great find! Did you mean Fairview, Alberta? That's what it says on the poster. Also, looking at it on Google Maps, it appears as though they could have driven back up to Dease Lake on Friday got on Highway 97, taking them past where Deese and Fowler were found and driven 97 all the way to Fairview. Crazy. I'm purely speculating. They could have just as well taken a different route but it caught my attention. Judging by time frames and sun angle I want to take a guess and say those photos were shot on Saturday afternoon?
So it begs the question on whether they drove north after stealing Mr. Dyck's Rav4 and entered through Fort ST John....or did they take the southern escape via Prince George and on to Dawson Creek.This IMHO speaks a lot to their route (It reports them as being in Fairview, AB). It looks to me like they didn't go through Dawson Creek, but cut across on 64, from Fort St. John, BC, on the Alaska Highway.