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  • Story of Amber Tuccaro

    Amber Alyssa Tuccaro, 20, was a mother to one son, Jacob, from Mikisew Cree First Nation. She was last seen on Aug. 18, 2010, in Nisku, Alta. On Sept. 1, 2012, horseback riders found her remains in the same area. In 2012, the police released a recording of a phone conversation Amber had with an unidentified male, hoping it would help identify the man. A few women came forward claiming to know the man’s identity; they all identified the same man. RCMP say they’ve looked into him, but he is not a person of interest. In 2017, the Tuccaro family increased the reward for information to $5,000 and started a Justice for Amber campaign on social media. In March 2014, Amber’s mother, Vivian Tuccaro, filed a complaint against the Leduc RCMP saying they downplayed her disappearance, including taking her off the missing persons list after one month, despite no one seeing her.

  • Amber Guiboche

    Amber Rose Marie Guiboche, 20, was from Sapotawayak Cree Nation and wanted to become a nurse, possibly even a doctor. But on Nov. 10, 2010, just five days after her birthday, she disappeared from Winnipeg’s William Avenue and Isabel Street area. On Aug. 12, 2014, investigators asked the public for help to identify someone that may know what happened to her. In 2016, Project Devote took over Amber’s case. In November 2017, police released new information about the truck that Amber was last seen in before disappearing. It was a mid-90s, burgundy Chevrolet Silverado, with an extended cab and short box with a decal reading “4×4” toward the rear of the box and the outline of the word “Chevrolet” across the tailgate.

  • Story of Andria Meise

    Andria Meise, mother of three, was 32 when she was last seen in Grande Prairie, Alberta in 2010. She grew up in Kelowna but was known to move around between British Columbia and Alberta. Family describe her as a free spirit — a young woman who was resilient and adventurous. She also had struggles with addiction. Her sister says she first tried to report Andria missing in 2006 but that a file wasn’t opened until November 2012. Andria’s case is held by the Grande Prairie RCMP.

  • Story of Angel Carlick

    Angel Edna Carlick, 19, worked at The Youth of Today Society — the same downtown Whitehorse, Yukon resource centre she said changed her life. Shortly after her high school graduation, on May 27, 2007 Carlick was seen for the last time in the city. Nearly six months later, a hiker found her body in a wooded area in Pilot Mountain, Yukon near Whitehorse. The city’s RCMP is investigating the homicide, and Carlick’s friend and former colleague says officers contact her each year in April with updates. The last she heard, three officers are working on the case.

  • Story of Angela Meyer

    Angela Meyer, 22, loved to be hugged and loved to talk to people, but struggled with schizophrenia, said her family. She was last seen in Yellowknife on Nov. 27, 2010. The Yellowknife RCMP is investigating the missing persons case, but her family wonders why it took a month for officers to conduct an air search. In 2015, a different officer took over Angela’s case. In January 2018, the family spoke about Angela’s case at the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls inquiry in Yellowknife, saying the biggest issue in the north is not having enough supports for mental health.

  • Story of Angela Williams

    Angela Williams, mother to three daughters, was reported missing on Boxing Day in 2001. She was living in Vancouver at the time and had recently told family she was worried something might happen to her. Her body was found nearly two weeks prior to the missing persons report being filed — a Jane Doe dumped in a ditch along a rural road in Surrey, British Columbia. Angela’s family says her case is held by the Surrey RCMP Serious Crimes Unit. No one has been charged in her death.

  • Story of Angeline Pete

    Angeline Pete, 28, went missing from North Vancouver May 26, 2011. Pete’s family have done extensive searches and made multiple appeals to the public since her disappearance. So far, Pete, from Quatsino First Nation, has not been located. The North Vancouver RCMP is still investigating her disappearance.

  • Story of Annie Pootoogook

    Annie Pootoogook, 46, was a well-known Inuk artist originally from Cape Dorset, Nunavut, who lived in Ottawa. She was known for her drawings of contemporary Inuit culture. On the morning of Sept. 19, 2016, her body was found in the Rideau River. Ottawa Police are investigating it as a suspicious death. They told relatives they were unable to determine if she was drowned by herself or by someone else. Because she was found in the river, DNA evidence was also difficult to gather. She was buried in her home community, Cape Dorset.

  • Story of Annie Yassie

    Annie Yassie was 13 years old when she disappeared on June 22, 1974. She had just returned to Churchill, Manitoba, from a residential school in Dauphin, Manitoba. The initial RCMP investigation revealed that Annie took a cab with a male companion, and they got out almost three kilometres away from the town — the last time Annie was seen alive. In the fall of 2014, Winnipeg RCMP contacted Annie’s family.

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