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Young
Hearts, Young Lives
Profiles of the Highway of Tears' missing girls
By
Michelle
Oleman
Aielah Saric-Auger, was an aboriginal girl just 14 years old when
she disappeared on February 2 of this year. She is the youngest and most
recent of the young women to go missing along what is now known as the
Highway of Tears (a stretch of highway in remote northern B.C.) which
serves many aboriginal communities.
Aielah attended D.P. Todd High School, and lived at home with her family.
She had left her home with her sister and brother for a day at the mall.
Her mother describes the awful feeling when your child leaves home and
a nagging feeling tells you to ask her to stay home today. As Aielah and
her siblings left the home Mrs. Audrey Saric-Auger describes how beautiful
she was, and telling her that she loves her very much, and to hurry home
as soon as she's done; and finally blowing her a kiss. One final kiss,
which represents all the love that has been lost for many of the Highway
of Tears victims and their families for the Saric-Auger family its tragic.
Tragic for a mother who was called to identify the body of her young daughter
10 days later, the loss of such a young girl is tremendous. "She
was not a hooker, she wasn't even hitchhiking! She just wanted to hang
out with her friends at the mall, why did you have to pick my baby girl!!"
is how Mrs. Saric-Auger expresses her anguish toward the perpetrator(s).
Aielah's small body was found, and identifiable, but so much of it was
missing that the family had to have a closed casket funeral. This case
of a missing girl only lasted 10 days, but the outcome of the search,
which was delayed at Mrs. Saric-Auger's own request, is the worst-case
scenario for every family.
Tamara
Chipman, 22, was last seen hitchhiking along highway 16 just outside
of Prince George, in September 2001. She is an aboriginal woman who is
spunky, fun-loving and very fond of her 6- year-old son Jayden. This behavior
of not calling home to check in, like many other missing women, is not
normal behavior for her.
Her aunt Lorna Brown pleads to the public to keep an eye out for her missing
loved one. "Lord I pray that she's found and that anybody who comes
across her since September 21 (2005) would come forward to the RCMP. This
is a girl who is loved by her mother, her stepfather, and her (entire)
family
"
Tamara is described as being 5'10" tall, and a slight 130 pounds,
with brown eyes and short brown hair. She is prone to wearing a variety
of wigs, including blonde, red, and brunette. Police describe her lifestyle
as highrisk, as she was known to hitchhike along the highway. She is one
of the most recent women to go missing and not be found along the Yellowhead
highway.
Nicole Hoar, 25 at the time of her disappearance, was a bubbly,
vivacious young caucasian woman who worked as a tree planter in the Nothern
B.C. region for a few years. Nicole hails from Red Deer, Alta., and had
made plans to surprise her sister in Smithers B.C., she left Prince George
on June 21, 2002, in hopes of showing up on her sister's doorstep "out
of the blue."
The Hoar family had the swiftest and most impressive response of all the
cases of missing women on the highway thus far, the Hoars are the only
non-aboriginal family to have reported a missing loved one along this
lonely stretch of road. Of the tragedy and the subsequent response Jack
Hoar thanks the community for their tremendous support and the officials
for their efforts in the search for his daughter. A massive police search
has failed to find her.
Lana Derrick, aged 19, from Thornhill B.C., disappeared October
7, 1995 from a local gas station. She was enrolled in forestry studies
at Northwest Community College in Prince George and was only home for
the weekend. Lana's friend Tania says of her " I know in my heart
that there is no hope to bring Lana Derrick home safe, but maybe your
(publications) can help to solve this case so that Lana's remains can
be brought home and buried properly," bleak words for remembering
a young woman who had a bright future and friends and family who loved
her.
Ramona
Wilson was 15 when she vanished on June 11,1994. She was hitchhiking
along the highway to meet friends in nearby Smithers. Ramona was also
a high school student who lived with her family. She was a bright student,
full of life, friendly high-school student who hoped to attend the University
of Victoria. She had made a phone call to let her family know that she
was heading home and was expected a short 10-30 minutes after that phone
call. Her remains were found almost a year later, April 1995 near the
Smithers Airport. She had been strangled and the police told the family
that the murder had been sexually motivated.
Monica Ingas went missing some years prior to this December 13,
1974. Speculations are that she may have been one of the first victims.
She was also a high school student who sometimes hitched a ride to and
from school. Living with her family in Thornhill, just outside of Terrace
promoted this activity for some of the young students who may have practiced
extra-curricular activities in school or in town, which would involve
missing a school bus.
Janet Hulkrans, an area resident recalls Monica had been near the
age of her own children who were in school and seeing her hitchhiking
along the highway. "Maybe she was the first (to disappear). She wasn't
much older than my kids and I had picked her up once and driven her to
school, so she is forever in my memory. She was a nice girl and doesn't
deserve to be forgotten.".
On April 6th, 1975 Monica's partially nude body was found. Six kilometers
from Terrace B.C., in a gravel pit, yet another grisly discovery after
a short 4- month search for a missing loved one.
Alberta Williams, 24 and only 5'2" tall weighing 115 pounds
was reported missing August 26, 1989. She had moved with her sister Claudia
Williams to work at a local fishing company earlier that summer and as
the season came to an end the two went out for a night on the town with
two other women (cousins) and one man (one of the ladies' boyfriend).
Once she was reported missing the family searched for days. Her father
commented that, "It makes me sad to see my children searching through
bushes
" for the remains of their own sibling.
Several weeks later, mid September, hikers found the remains 37 kilometres
outside of Prince Rupert, at a place called the Tyee Overpass.
Alberta's sister provides a clear description of her personality in this
simple, and sad but true statement, "She was just so kind, so tiny
and so kind. Out of all my sisters she's the best. I really think she's
be around today if she weren't that friendly person that she was."
Alberta's body was flown to Vancouver B.C., for an autopsy, but 17 years
later the family still has no answers and her body has not yet been laid
to rest.
Delphine Nikal, aged 15, disappeared from Smithers B.C. on June
14, 1990 hitchhiking east along highway 16. Her home was in nearby Telkwa
B.C., and her family describes her as a peaceful, fun-loving, spirited
young girl who loves life and would never leave without explanation.
Roxanne Thiara, also 15 years old, went missing from Prince George
in 1994. She had been out with a friend, and is the first to have anyone
mention that she worked as a prosititute. She had mentioned to her friend
that she was going to see a "customer" and disappeared around
the side of a building in Prince George and was never heard from again.
She disappeared the July long weekend, and was found two weeks later August
17, 1994. Sixteen kilometers outside of Burns Lake her body was found
in the brush alongside deadly highway 16.
Leah
Alishia Germaine, aged 15, was the second one who had reports of previously
working in the sex trade. Her body was found by three teen-aged boys behind
a Prince George elementary school, she had been stabbed to death. Leah's
family was aware of some of her activities, and her friend's swear that
she had left the lifestyle for a couple of weeks prior to her disappearance.
Eleven years later, there's still no closure for a family who clearly
loved their little girl, and still miss her.
Leah's (Alishia) aunt Connie puts it very simply in words of memory, "When
Leah was young I had the pleasure of her living with my family and I
she was so full of life always smiling
she loved kisses, her kitty
Pookie, but especially her Mom, and Dad, Ken Pirie."
Her brother, Jonah Cunningham states on the Highway of Tears Website,
"If more attention is brought to the many mysteries that have lived
and lie along this lonesome stretch of road- and the communities that
live along it- perhaps it will bring a long overdue spotlight to this
part of our province
," wraps it up very nicely for all the
families who have had loved ones gone missing and/or murdered along the
notorious Highway of Tears.
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