January - 2006
Family searches for clues as seventh girl
disappears
By Rudy Kelly, Raven's Eye Writer, Prince Rupert
Another Aboriginal woman has gone missing on the "Highway
of Tears" near Prince Rupert, again raising fears that a
serial killer is on the loose in northwestern British Columbia.
Tamara Chipman, 22, was officially reported missing in late
November and a massive two-week search in December along Highway
16 between Terrace and Prince Rupert has turned up nothing. If
she is not found, Chipman would be the seventh young woman-the
sixth Aboriginal-to have gone missing along that stretch of highway
since 1990. The bodies of three of the Aboriginal women, all
15 year olds, have been found.
Chipman, who lives in Thornhill near Terrace, was last seen
in late September hitchhiking on the highway in Prince Rupert
near the industrial site turnoff, apparently headed home. She
has not been heard from since.
Sgt. Eric Stubbs of the Terrace RCMP, said that, while the
police are looking at "a number of viable options, the idea
of a serial killer is something we have to consider, considering
the similar circumstances."
The similar circumstances Stubbs speaks of are that the six
Aboriginal women were all young, between the ages 15-22 (the
only non-Aboriginal woman on the list, Nicole Hoar, was 25 when
she disappeared in 2002), and five of the seven women were last
seen on Highway 16 or their bodies were found on Highway 16.
In December, area residents joined Tamara's family and friends
to search the roads between Rupert and Terrace.
"There was a really good community response," said
Tamara's father, Tom Chipman, who lives in Remo, a small community
just outside of Terrace. "We had about a dozen people out
each day for about two weeks, searching the highway and down
all the side roads. The search is pretty much done now."
Tom last saw Tamara Sept. 12 as she was going to meet some
friends at the bar in Terrace but, "somehow she ended up
in Rupert" where her mother lives, as do the friends she
was going to see.
Tamara is facing assault charges and her father said, at first,
they thought she was "hiding out" from the law, but
it has now been three months and she has contacted no one, nor
has her bank account been touched.
"It's not like her to pull a disappearing act like this,"
he said.
Although the recent number of missing women is seven, Amnesty
International Canada says the total tally on the stretch known
as the "Highway of Tears" stands at 33, with all save
one being Aboriginal.
Some groups, like Amnesty, have suggested that police are
not terribly concerned about the cases because they involve Aboriginal
women, a charge the police strongly deny.
As far as Tamara's father is concerned, the RCMP "have
been doing a very good job. They're not brushing it under the
table at all."
Sgt. Stubbs said there have been a number of tips from the
public, some more reliable than others, but nothing substantial
has turned up as of yet.
He urged the public to keep on the lookout for Tamara, who
is 5'10" tall and 130 pounds. She has brown eyes and very
short brown hair, (buzz cut); however, she was known to wear
wigs. If anyone has any information that may help, they can call
their nearest RCMP detachment or Crimestoppers.
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