Home News Canada news Missing vehicle accused killer Myles Sanderson is believed to have travelled in has been found
Canada news

Missing vehicle accused killer Myles Sanderson is believed to have travelled in has been found

Share
missing vehicle accused killer myles sanderson is believed to have travelled in has been found
Share

The missing Black Nissan Rogue that accused killer Myles Sanderson is believed to have been travelling in has been found.

Sanderson was one of two suspects in the fatal stabbing rampage at James Smith Cree Nation and Weldon, Sask., last Sunday. 

Assistant Commissioner Rhonda Blackmore says the Rogue was found Friday morning about four kilometres east of Crystal Springs, Sask.

“The vehicle had been driven off the gravel road behind trees and was not visible from the main road,” Blackmore said in a YouTube video released Friday afternoon.

Myles Sanderson died Wednesday afternoon shortly after police captured him in a different stolen vehicle.

His brother Damien, who had also been charged with murder, was found dead on Monday. 

Blackmore said they received a tip on Thursday from a witness who said they believed they saw Myles Sanderson Sunday evening, some hours after the stabbings that left 10 residents of the two communities dead.

missing vehicle accused killer myles sanderson is believed to have travelled in has been found
Assistant Commissioner Rhonda Blackmore says the Rogue was found Friday morning about four kilometres east of Crystal Springs, Sask. (Richard Agecoutay/CBC)

The witness “provided a detailed account of seeing an unknown male walking south on a grid road near the intersection of Range Rd, 2235 and Township Road 440 on Sunday, September 4 at 7:40 p.m.”

Blackmore said investigators then shifted their search area further north of that location with aerial and ground teams and found the vehicle.

“The black Rogue was removed from the area and will be processed as part of the investigation,” Blackmore said. “The area is is closed off while further examination occurs.”

missing vehicle accused killer myles sanderson is believed to have travelled in has been found 1
Myles Sanderson, 32, died shortly after getting arrested by RCMP north of Saskatoon on Sept. 7. He was the main suspect in a stabbing rampage on James Smith Cree Nation that left 10 people dead and 18 wounded over the Labour Day weekend. (Saskatchewan RCMP)

And the location of the Rogue is just a dozen or so kilometres north of where Sanderson stole the Chevy Avalanche that police caught him in.

Crystal Springs is about 65 kilometres southwest of James Smith Cree Nation and about 130 kilometres northeast of Saskatoon.

“We continue to ask residents in the Wakaw, Crystal Springs, Weldon and James Smith Cree Nation communities and surrounding areas to report any information of past possible sightings, suspicious activity or thefts to their local police detachment,” Blackmore said, adding that a seemingly insignificant tip may lead to crucial evidence.

“This is, and continues to be, one of the most complex investigations and urgent public safety incidents in Saskatchewan’s history, and it continues to be an ongoing criminal investigation.”

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles
Japanese immigrants fought for Canada during WW I while denied the right to vote
Canada news

Remembering Those Who Served — Japanese Canadians in WWI, Overlooked at Home

It’s strange and a little bitter how memory works. For decades, the...

Advocates concerned temporary immigration cuts don't address systemic issues
Canada news

Cutting Temporary Visas Won’t Fix Deep Problems — But It Will Hurt Some People

A big change is coming. The new Carney government has announced a...

MMA gym owners, coaches ID’d at secretive neo-Nazi event in B.C.
Canada news

MMA gym owners, coaches identified at secret neo-Nazi event in B.C.

Several prominent white supremacist groups convened in Vancouver this summer for a...

Canadian history is dotted with floor-crossers. Voters haven't always been thrilled
Canada news

When MPs Change Sides: Why Floor-Crossing Feels Risky — and Sometimes Pays Off

There’s something a little theatrical about an MP walking across the floor...