The Family That Vanished

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ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 3 100
@Abstract
@Abstract Жыл бұрын
PATREON: patreon.com/realhorror SOURCES, NOTES & MORE: bit.ly/44i5kUy TWITTER: @therealhorroryt THREADS: @therealhorrorchannel This video has been made by one person, there may be small mistakes, typos etc. Thank you for understanding 🙏 Corrections: - The driver is on the right side of the road but the wrong side of the car - The sign should say 12am, to indicate midnight, not 12pm - Any statistics refer to ‘the highway of tears’ (the area between Prince Rupert and Prince George) not highway 16 in general, which is much longer
@itallia666
@itallia666 Жыл бұрын
Btw, ive just subbed to your channel & left you a long comment about my experience concerning The Big Dipper amusement ride in Battersea Park. I do hope you will read it It was an experience that set my path for the future. Though not hurt, i could so very have been. Thank you for yr videos Peace 🇬🇧👧
@jason.larsenthedanishgreek1226
@jason.larsenthedanishgreek1226 Жыл бұрын
Ronnie is desperate and stupid enough to put his whole family at risk with NO basic information given to his mother... but let's blame WHT ppl and institutional waaaaythism right?
@Sincityraider
@Sincityraider 11 ай бұрын
Amazingly well created & researched videos. Hauntingly gripping from beginning to end.
@betterthanyesterday3912
@betterthanyesterday3912 11 ай бұрын
0:07 0:07 0:07 0:07
@zaneleposh
@zaneleposh 10 ай бұрын
But when will you upload again? We've been begging 😢😢😢😢😢
@HarshveerPoonia
@HarshveerPoonia Жыл бұрын
On highway 16, West of Prince George where I lived for several years, there is a town called Vanferhoof. In 2014 my mom got a job there and due to some circumstances she took it. She was given a place to stay which was an old motel turned into 5 rental units. My mom called me first night she was there and told me she was feeling very unsafe and had a bad feeling. The room next to her was talking very loudly and there was a car circling the property. She decided to drive to a busier part of town and sleep in her car. Next morning when she returned. There was a police everywhere. The people in the room next to her got killed. The thought of if she decided to stay there that night still haunts me. Highway 16 is no joke.
@meghansullivan6812
@meghansullivan6812 9 ай бұрын
holy shitttt. goes to show the importance of listening to ur gut!! im so glad your mom is okay
@Stumpchunkman226
@Stumpchunkman226 9 ай бұрын
@@meghansullivan6812that’s not listening to your gut. That’s directly observing your environment and recognizing it’s not safe. 😂
@bronwynkeirstead5039
@bronwynkeirstead5039 9 ай бұрын
That is genuinely terrifying. so glad your mom is safe!
@godwinmlay3405
@godwinmlay3405 9 ай бұрын
That is obedience to the leading of the spirit of God
@namelessking111
@namelessking111 9 ай бұрын
​@@Stumpchunkman226Observation of your environment and recognizing that it is not safe is literally part of your intuition or your "gut feeling", wtf is your point?
@preyslaydisplay
@preyslaydisplay Жыл бұрын
The second I realized the family was an indigenous one, I knew the police would make this case a frustrating one. HUGE props to you for not making the fact that this was likely a hate crime a side note, and for noting the violent history the Canadian government has with its indigenous population, many other creators wouldn't.
@CarlosGutierrez-ef2pd
@CarlosGutierrez-ef2pd 10 ай бұрын
Nazi crown colony
@WithDiameter
@WithDiameter 10 ай бұрын
All channels do tf
@penelopesharp2432
@penelopesharp2432 10 ай бұрын
Oh give it a rest, it’s a cold case, stop accusing police of not caring about Indigenous people. I am Indigenous, and it is such a false narrative. Like there are no Caucasian people missing for decades or Caucasian families missing or murdered that are COLD cases!
@freedomisslavery6840
@freedomisslavery6840 10 ай бұрын
They are mostly killed by other natives, not by Whites are you are insinuating.
@pamelapamper
@pamelapamper 9 ай бұрын
While I agree indigenous ppl seem to get unfairly forgotten by police in these cases, I believe the narration here was misguiding, it seems to me police genuinely had trouble setting the record straight from the stories told by family members, including the one who actually told police they had been found and were fine. That detail alone to me seems massive and warranting of an investigation, if a family member indeed said that then that person must have been somewhat involved in a cover up yet the narrator here glossed over like it was just police making stuff up, did they make it up or did the family member lie? That's a pivotal question, not an anecdote to just move on from.
@mackhomie6
@mackhomie6 9 ай бұрын
Daycare at a logging camp. Ronnie was clearly desperate. When ronnie was unable to get his brother to watch his kids and the mystery man told him that there was actually day care at the logging camp, I'm guessing alarm bells went off for he and/or his wife, hence the disturbing last words on the call. It seems like they ignored their gut on this one.
@wahoo264
@wahoo264 7 ай бұрын
I guess the risk seemed less significant than the reward in that moment. Absolutely tragic
@salvadorgutierrez8291
@salvadorgutierrez8291 6 ай бұрын
they probably thought that it seemed to good to be true and that it was all just way to convinient but given their situation they decided to take the risk just to support their family. Is truly horrible
@mackhomie6
@mackhomie6 6 ай бұрын
Hard to imagine what the motivation would be for the killer. These people didn't have any money, and having to dispose of an entire family (and win a violent encounter with the husband) seems like a steep entry price for just a SA on the wife (if that was the motivation), and we don't know if Ronnie had even mentioned his family at all at the point that the two began discussing work at the logging camp (leaving open the possibility that the killer was primarily interested in Ronnie). The two advantages this course of action seemed to have was getting one/some/all of these people to _willingly_ travel to a destination in the middle of nowhere (where nobody would be around to see or hear whatever happened next), and also to eliminate the only other person who could point investigators in the right direction. The kids seemed to just be in the wrong place at the wrong time, but I'm not any kind of expert on this case (or an expert at all, for that matter) Edit: I wrote another long post after thinking this over some more and I've become pretty convinced that this is likely to be sexually motivated
@pixeldragon7899
@pixeldragon7899 5 ай бұрын
@@mackhomie6 motivation could very well just be racism tbf. thatd be my guess based on how youre saying with there not really being any other reason to do this
@pitbullthedog668
@pitbullthedog668 5 ай бұрын
@@mackhomie6video said most victims in Highway 16 are indigenous. Don’t be surprised if he killed other indigenous. Racism motive
@emilyfletcher7124
@emilyfletcher7124 Жыл бұрын
There's a deeply upsetting pattern here in Australia where law enforcement frequently dismisses cases of missing Indigenous people by saying they've probably gone walkabout (a traditional practice that does NOT mean disappearing without telling anyone) - even in cases of missing young children. I'm always happy to see these greater issues talked about.
@eeeeeeeeeerrr
@eeeeeeeeeerrr Жыл бұрын
Aussie here too! There's also been numerous cases of aus police picking up indigenous people (particularly kids) and then dropping them off in random extremely rural areas in the middle of the night
@Deasherb
@Deasherb 11 ай бұрын
​@@eeeeeeeeeerrrAnd letting white men who lynch Indigenous people get away with it. Sick pigs
@sweetsourpork111
@sweetsourpork111 11 ай бұрын
Dont forget, indigenous people commit horrific crimes also. They’re not treated poorly by police because they got drunk under a tree. Machete attacks, rape, pedophilia and brutal assault just to name a few.
@vjc2270
@vjc2270 10 ай бұрын
Sad, but true. I was going to make a similar comment myself, but you beat me to it. Well said. 👏Unfortunately, the racist legacy of colonialism is alive and well in both Canada and Australia.😢😡
@Petey0707
@Petey0707 10 ай бұрын
So disgusting. Lord knows the long list of systemic abuse that still occurs today. No doubt if it were revealed these atrocities would ignite protests, revolts, perhaps revolution.@@eeeeeeeeeerrr
@nobye9716
@nobye9716 9 ай бұрын
My mom has been missing for 5 years from Alberta.. she is part Cree and was homeless/addicted to drugs all my life, so the police just literally don't care... seeing that the jack family got no coverage at all really makes me think of her case.....
@andy-xz2uk
@andy-xz2uk 9 ай бұрын
"homeless/addicted to drugs"
@rottenteeth2623
@rottenteeth2623 8 ай бұрын
I’m very sorry that happened, I hope you find closure someday
@Wasp9000
@Wasp9000 7 ай бұрын
I’m terribly sorry that you’ve had to go through this. Prayers for closure!
@panini1292
@panini1292 5 ай бұрын
@@andy-xz2ukand?
@Josdewolf
@Josdewolf 4 ай бұрын
@@panini1292and police don’t really care for homeless drug addicts hence she’ll never be found unless she comes forward herself
@rdvrlrn
@rdvrlrn 10 ай бұрын
this started out as a true crime video and ended up being a documentary that genuinely educated me. thank you so much for being so thorough.
@JamilaJibril-e8h
@JamilaJibril-e8h 5 ай бұрын
An example to follow.....
@Shephardsatan
@Shephardsatan 4 ай бұрын
I agree. I've watched 2 RH videos so far and I think it's so nice how she's not disrespectfull at all, no glitz and glam and sensationalism. Just a story, told very well, acknowledging the indegenious part of the equation and all that. Genuinly brings me hope in humanity.
@thebittersupport1597
@thebittersupport1597 Жыл бұрын
I'm watching this on july 26th, and according to 31:12, it would have been little Ryan's 38th birthday today. Happy birthday, Ryan. You and your family are not forgotten, and hopefully one day, your disappearance will be solved and you all will be at peace. Heartbreaking.
@OopsOlliePopp
@OopsOlliePopp 10 ай бұрын
As a Canadian I have to say I have immense respect for how open and real you are about the horrible treatment of indigenous communities instead of tip toeing around the details. A lot of the history classes I did in school very vaguely grazed on it with a very broad open ended description and then moved on like it wasnt important that there was a mass murder and torture of people that happened here. Thank you for your amazing work and research on these videos
@rachelo1727
@rachelo1727 10 ай бұрын
I have to agree. I had to sign up for a special social justice class just to learn about indigenous groups in Canada and the injustices that they faced. (Deplorable that it wasn't in history classes to begin with) It was a class run by a teacher who made it her passion to teach topics that weren't regularly taught. The school board hung it over her head that if students didn't sign up-- she couldn't teach it. I'm forever grateful that we had members of different groups come in and share their experiences and open up about the terrible things they were forced to go through, like the residential schools. It's not something we should ever forget.
@CJM-rg5rt
@CJM-rg5rt 10 ай бұрын
The thing is it's the same everywhere. I'd turn myself in to whoever did this for a accurate sociopath test used countrywide, if your profession includes authority that means you passed. I assume it won't be quick for me, nobody needs to know about my sacrifice either.. besides me and my new housemate whose above me on the ground floor loading a syringe with muscle relaxer, he won't take me for a spin without it.
@bronwynkeirstead5039
@bronwynkeirstead5039 9 ай бұрын
In both of the high schools I attended it was mandatory to take an indigenous focused art class and English class which focused on art and literature created by indigenous people. In one of the indigenous studies English classes I took, at the second school I went to, we had to do research on historical events focusing on the injustices and the oppression of indigenous peoples here in Canada. (I live in Ontario btw). I did mine on the Oka Crisis, but a girl in my class did one on the highway of tears. It was the second time I had heard of it but the first time I had really learned about it and became familiar. That was a project that stuck with me, because as we all presented our research and applied the context of Indigenous culture and the generational trauma caused by residential schools, I could tell we all gained an emotional connection and understanding of the topics we chose and learned about. It became even more personal to me then. As a young, white Canadian, I am genuinely glad to see Canada's horrific history truthfully being taught in school today, for I probably would have remained sheltered from it just as past generations have. I think being upfront about the validity of Canada's brutal treatment towards indigenous peoples, allows people to truly see the problem and understand, in a clearer sense, the next steps to reconciliation. Obviously there is a loooonggg way to go, but it feels like we're in a step in the right direction. More than we ever have been. The way the information was presented in this video helps people from in and outside of Canada become aware of its history as well, which is something I admired.
@Stibick
@Stibick 7 ай бұрын
Canadian and I agree as well. It wasn’t until university I had an inkling of what absolute horrors happened to the indigenous people of Canada *and* what effects it continues to have on them and their communities. I also guessed as soon as I heard the family member’s names that the case was not given the attention it deserves from the police and media.
@amyleah08
@amyleah08 6 ай бұрын
I live in the US and it's mostly the same here. in school we'd talk about this for a day or two, maybe a week, then just keep going to talk much more extensively about some random white dude. It's infuriating
@yureituesday
@yureituesday Жыл бұрын
I grew up on the streets of this cesspool. I saw the ads about the family on TV. I watched my friends disappear over the years and have no idea how I’m still alive. Thank you for presenting this with such respect.
@rugeramerican308
@rugeramerican308 Жыл бұрын
Did you or other locals have any theory on this or other dissapearences?
@SH-to8sh
@SH-to8sh Жыл бұрын
@@rugeramerican308 doesn't it kind of come through by his comment? It's clear he's a minority and he's witnessed some serious abuse against indigenous people. Or at least unexplained events causing them to disappear. I would say discrimination/serial killing would be the best guess.
@mr.onethirtyeight5088
@mr.onethirtyeight5088 Жыл бұрын
@@SH-to8sh - Why do you presume it's a he? I'd wager the OP is female.
@randomness4989
@randomness4989 Жыл бұрын
​@@SH-to8shits plausible but the thing that strikes as odd is the police AND the media united that the familly is found and "fine",thats not incompetence nor racism BUT malicious imho and could indicate they were either killed by a serial killer OR a powerfull group of ogran traffickers
@yureituesday
@yureituesday Жыл бұрын
I’m an indigenous lady. Yurei = ghost. No one I knew there had any clue what happened. It’s obviously more than one serial killer. I left 20 years ago and i don’t even visit, Prince George is now full of meth addicts, violent homeless camps and often has the highest murder rate per capita in Canada. Best hope is that all the fracking around there causes enough earthquakes to swallow the city whole.
@pinkstitch8786
@pinkstitch8786 Жыл бұрын
The RCMP getting pissy about indigenous locals "not helping enough" when EVERYONE knows cops put minimal effort/resources/manpower into these cases is WILD to me. What a horrific tragedy for this family and their community.
@davidbucky7634
@davidbucky7634 Жыл бұрын
Thats very true or they say oh well they had a history of running away or drinking or drugs or prostitution like these arent humans and like that even matters in this situation obviously if they come from a historically poor and neglected area then theirs gonna be higher numbers of people with substance issues and people doing whatever they can for money the lack of police interest over a period of 50 years is extremley infuriating 🤬
@aiseruchaan
@aiseruchaan Жыл бұрын
They just want someone to blame. Cops whether from Canada, UK, to Asia, are all the same. PIGS!
@kaniq6120
@kaniq6120 Жыл бұрын
When my cousin disappeared the police refused to search for her for 48 days, we the whole village searched for her and found her dead body in the woods in a condition so terrible I'm not sure I can even say it and they never investigated. The case is technically open but they questioned nobody and did nothing we had to demand the autopsy report for weeks and it has been 7 years
@theonlybingledingle
@theonlybingledingle Жыл бұрын
@@kaniq6120’m so, so sorry. So much love to you and your family and community. I couldn’t imagine.
@cicada38
@cicada38 Жыл бұрын
@@kaniq6120 My heart goes out to you with my deepest sympathy and apology. Absolutely horrific to hear. I can only imagine that these officers/investigators have detached from reality to be so callous and be able to sleep at night. It's unexceptionable to be in that profession yet to be without some kind of a soul.
@gigimokri6476
@gigimokri6476 10 ай бұрын
My brother Meysam Mokri vanished into thin air in Aug of 2014. We are immigrants and very little was done to look for him. There has been absolutely no trace of him. But when a white woman literally blocks away went missing, it was all over the news. Helicopters all over our neighborhood, massive search party went on foot with dogs through the surrounding area, including forests. She was found almost 2 hours away in another city. But what about my brother. His disappearance has devastated me! BC has a huge problem with the number of people who go missing in this province and nothing is being done about it! This is absolutely horrible and unacceptable! What is it gonna take for them to take this matter seriously??? These are living, breathing human beings. They are someone’s loved ones! How can they vanish without a trace?? 😭😭🤣
@SugarandSarcasm
@SugarandSarcasm 9 ай бұрын
I hope you find out what happened to your brother one day 🧡
@gigimokri6476
@gigimokri6476 9 ай бұрын
@@SugarandSarcasm thank you. Not having closure is so difficult 🥺
@zeppelinzeppelini
@zeppelinzeppelini 8 ай бұрын
stay strong, i send my best wishes to you. i cant imagine how frustrating it is, thinking if the police had just helped your brother might've been found as quickly as that white woman. i hope you get that closure you desperately need
@gigimokri6476
@gigimokri6476 8 ай бұрын
@mehrimazedeh that is so very kind of you 🙏🙏🫶
@gigimokri6476
@gigimokri6476 8 ай бұрын
@@zeppelinzeppelini thank you for your kind words. They mean so much to me 🙏🙏🫶
@pitchkp96
@pitchkp96 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for addressing the myth of serial killers being "geniuses" who evade police capture. So many just take advantage of holes in a system that doesn't care about minoritized people.
@booognish
@booognish Жыл бұрын
I was minoritized Christian, but I don’t go to church anymore
@sionbarzad5371
@sionbarzad5371 Жыл бұрын
Not everything is about you tho
@bhaskarjyabaruah1090
@bhaskarjyabaruah1090 Жыл бұрын
weak
@micadean1600
@micadean1600 Жыл бұрын
@@bhaskarjyabaruah1090stupid
@micadean1600
@micadean1600 Жыл бұрын
@@sionbarzad5371troll
@Maltodextreen
@Maltodextreen Жыл бұрын
As a Tsimshian who lives less than an hour from Prince Rupert, this is something I grew up terrified about, and would constantly be trying to prevent since I was only 5 and I am so grateful that the horrific conditions we experience are FINALLY being talked about more. So from the bottom of my heart, thank you for helping bring attention to an issue that is all too often ignored or swept under the rug
@Melissa31179
@Melissa31179 Жыл бұрын
I'm amazed by the amount of native women compared to native men in the comments
@RaytardtheUntrainable
@RaytardtheUntrainable 11 ай бұрын
😂
@fernydyke
@fernydyke 9 ай бұрын
@@RaytardtheUntrainableyou’re a loser
@nakedbarebear8090
@nakedbarebear8090 9 ай бұрын
@@RaytardtheUntrainablewtf is funny
@namelessking111
@namelessking111 9 ай бұрын
​@@nakedbarebear8090Read his name, "Raytard". Makes sense why he's laughing right now.
@hugsie24
@hugsie24 10 ай бұрын
I can't imagine how that brother feels. One could never assume this tragedy, but knowing those children could have come with his family and been ok. I hope his heart heals.
@abelhapedras
@abelhapedras 8 ай бұрын
my first thought upon hearing it. I would have felt insanely guilty about it
@EntertainMeTV
@EntertainMeTV 8 ай бұрын
All he had to do was babysit for two weeks. For his brother going through financial struggles. Refusing was foolish, and his choice
@Wasp9000
@Wasp9000 7 ай бұрын
@@EntertainMeTVI don’t think it’s fair to assume his brother had it any easier. Perhaps their family was also struggling and they couldn’t afford to care for additional kids for those two weeks. The family probably has enough guilt on their conscience already without others blaming them for the actions of a monster and the complicity of the police.
@audellaroque4730
@audellaroque4730 3 ай бұрын
@@EntertainMeTVcome on dude. He suddenly was told in the middle of the night that he’d have to start watching his brothers kids the next day for two whole weeks. That’s a sudden thing to be told with no warning, it’s fully understandable why he’d decline
@arim.3304
@arim.3304 2 ай бұрын
@@audellaroque4730if a family member called me like that in the middle of the night, I’d be asking all kinds of questions. What an odd thing to ask, and to have to leave right then and there in the middle of the night to this mysterious job? No certain location? Idk. I’m sure he does feel guilty, but it really is overall an odd situation. No time to even think about things or figure if they can make it work. I understand why he said no, but I wonder if he told him anything else. Like maybe not to go or if he’s sure it’s legit. Maybe he did say something, and that’s why he got the idea to tell his mom to go look for him if he didn’t come back?
@alejandran4978
@alejandran4978 Жыл бұрын
I just refuse to believe that the strange man had no involvement in what happened to the family. Who would just go to a random guy in a bar you don’t frequent and offer him a job? Not only that, but to keep adding details to the job so that Ronnie couldn’t say no, such as hiring his wife and having a conveniently located daycare for the children. At 1 AM?? I hope that the truth comes out soon and that the family gets the peace they deserve after all this time Edit: I’m not at all blaming the family for agreeing to this whole deal. I was never and will never be in their shoes so I can’t pass judgement on them. I am pointing out that the theory that the stranger wasn’t involved in the disappearance doesn’t make any sense to me
@DinoCism
@DinoCism Жыл бұрын
Knowing the RCMP I think it's fair to assume they have precisely 0 people working on this case and if the truth ever comes out it won't be as a result of any so-called "investigation."
@Abstract
@Abstract Жыл бұрын
Yeah. It seems that way. And evidence seems to suggest that Ronnie attempted to get someone to care for the kids (his brother) before accepting the offer, so it clearly wasn’t the ideal scenario for the family, else they wouldn’t have made that call. People say the offer of daycare is weird but what if was more casual (as in ‘just bring the kids and watch them yourself’) and Ronnie just said day care was available to his mom to appease her? Then such an offer would have been much for believable for Ronnie and Doreen. The offer may have just been made at 7pm but they were chatting in the pub for a while, and 1am was just when they left as Doreen would have needed time to prepare for the kids. So many aspects to this case. If only there were more witnesses in the pub that night…
@francessimmonds5784
@francessimmonds5784 Жыл бұрын
And the way he hurried them, they had to leave that night!
@Peekaboo-Kitty
@Peekaboo-Kitty Жыл бұрын
Many would. Never under-estimate human stupidity!
@tanyabrown9839
@tanyabrown9839 Жыл бұрын
it depends on what country one is in... in my country strangers offer other strangers jobs all the time. I had a friend come over and visit me for three months from overseas and while he was here, he had two offers given to him for a job just out of the blue by strangers (when he wasn't even after a job).
@GingerBeanz7
@GingerBeanz7 Жыл бұрын
I’m an indigenous women from bc, this story has always been one that I find myself coming back to. Thank you for covering it. It’s always such a validating feeling when a channel i frequent speaks on the issue of missing indigenous peoples in Canada.
@assas1nscreed
@assas1nscreed Жыл бұрын
​@SH-to8sh 'a classic for the campfire'? This isn't some childish horror fable, it's a real case with real people who are victims of systemic racism, and further horrors beyond our comprehension. Think before you type, especially if you're replying to someone who themselves is a minority
@ugetsuapologist5310
@ugetsuapologist5310 Жыл бұрын
@@SH-to8sh girl stfu. jesus christ, people like you are so insensitive
@vagabond2570
@vagabond2570 Жыл бұрын
@@SH-to8sh You are the definition of why we failed as a society.
@SH-to8sh
@SH-to8sh Жыл бұрын
No. The guy who did this to the Jack family and the investigation (or lack thereof, shall we say) is the definition of why we failed as a society.@@vagabond2570
@Person0fColor
@Person0fColor 9 ай бұрын
@@assas1nscreed Im a minority, Navajo. there is no such thing as "systemic racism" I can name 2 people right now who lost heir life to gun violence, one was half white the other was gunned down in some sort of gang initiation at a red light. Their stories didnt even get front page in our own town. Take your democratic talking points and shove it up your ....
@bollocks42o
@bollocks42o Жыл бұрын
I’m from BC. We don’t even call it highway 16 anymore - it’s called the highway of tears. There are AT LEAST double the amount of victims if you ask me, the RCMP cover up or make light of every possible situation they come across… especially when it comes to Indigenous Canadians. Its disgusting.
@FRLN500
@FRLN500 10 ай бұрын
I'm from Smithers, B.C. We call this road Highway 16. The term "highway of tears" is used by the people from Vancouver and Victoria and other people that don't live anywhere near us. There are a few activists up here that will refer to it as the highway of tears when they talk to the media but refer to it as highway 16 the rest of the time.
@bollocks42o
@bollocks42o 10 ай бұрын
@@FRLN500 I’m from the southern interior near Salmon Arm, thanks for the info - glad to know its not a daunting entity to those who have to live on it.
@priscillaross-fox9407
@priscillaross-fox9407 9 ай бұрын
It's not just in Canada Things will be changing but not for the better I'm afraid. Stay alert.
@RIVALContentJammerz
@RIVALContentJammerz 9 ай бұрын
That's great, Kelci. Not about YOU.
@bollocks42o
@bollocks42o 8 ай бұрын
@@RIVALContentJammerz k? so i cant comment on the video about my perspective from a few hours away?
@WhatAreTheOdds5050
@WhatAreTheOdds5050 Жыл бұрын
The fact you make these brilliant videos alone is honestly astounding. You have a real talent and, although there are a lot of horror story channels out there, yours deserves far more praise and attention: particularly since you provide such broad, well researched context for each story that goes the extra mile in terms of immersion. Long may it continue! Thanks for all your efforts.
@kelleh711
@kelleh711 Жыл бұрын
"Jack family are buried at the south end of Morton ranch" "Is this regarding the Jack family?" Fantastic detective work RCMP
@marlenejack4861
@marlenejack4861 Жыл бұрын
what are you saying ? you know something ? or you just comment on video ?
@kelleh711
@kelleh711 Жыл бұрын
@@marlenejack4861 I'm sorry I don't know anything, I just think the RCMP really fumbled on this case and that moment was a good example of how incompetent they could be
@tannerb1527
@tannerb1527 Жыл бұрын
Was there ever any follow up on that call?? Did they do any digs out there?
@kelleh711
@kelleh711 Жыл бұрын
@@tannerb1527 according to the video they aren't sure what ranch is actually being referenced, and while they did some digs they weren't able to find anything. :(
@ggaiakiei
@ggaiakiei Жыл бұрын
Smartest Canadian
@princex-synth
@princex-synth Жыл бұрын
I’m an indigenous person who resides in Canada and wanted to say I really appreciate that you went into detail about Canada’s treatment of our peoples as a factor in this case and not just a simple “serial killer was smart!” You’ve earned my respect 🧡
@KleptomaniacJames
@KleptomaniacJames 8 ай бұрын
I'm generally not a fan of systematic racism arguments, but this one is indisputable. Either the leadership of the RCMP is rotten or there is legit institutional racism going on here. Its fucking pathetic our taxes go towards such a backwards organization.
@souupyyy
@souupyyy 7 ай бұрын
same here, they just earned a subscriber 🧡
@mallarieluvsgirls
@mallarieluvsgirls 11 ай бұрын
the fact that this happens to native people especially women constantly at ridiculous rates is horrifying. i’m native and thank you so so much for covering our stories. when you’re native police and rcmp, even normal people don’t care as much about native people. they don’t see their humanity and assume they’re drinking or leading an unsavoury life as a response to trauma caused by racism and the canadian government. history, they’d say. but it’s my families stories. i hope one day people can care about us being murdered at horrifying rates. cause no one really does. it’s heartbreaking. it honestly makes me feel hopeless as a native teen to see how most of society ignores us even in death.
@margeebechyne8642
@margeebechyne8642 Жыл бұрын
I wonder how the uncle who didn't want to take in the kids felt about what happened. I would have been tormented with guilty forever.
@hnichole
@hnichole Жыл бұрын
That's what I immediately thought about as well, I would forever feel guilty that because of a choice I'd made the kids went missing too. Not that it was the uncle's fault of course, he had no way of knowing what was happening, but if it were me the what ifs would kill me.
@SH-to8sh
@SH-to8sh Жыл бұрын
it seems like it would be a red herring but I believe the uncle was present at the house at 1am..which is weird in itself. If it was to say goodbye he may have warned them...we don't know that detail. Don't forget these were desperately hungry people, but on the other hand I wonder if it was something sinister arranged within the family.
@margeebechyne8642
@margeebechyne8642 Жыл бұрын
@@SH-to8sh I thought it was a cousin visiting, not the uncle.
@SH-to8sh
@SH-to8sh Жыл бұрын
@@margeebechyne8642 it was the uncle..he told his brother too before they left
@margeebechyne8642
@margeebechyne8642 Жыл бұрын
@@SH-to8sh Oh, okay. I probably should listen again, but this one was a hard one for me. The children make it so hard.
@wisewordsofthebongos
@wisewordsofthebongos 9 ай бұрын
the institutional racism in canada and the us is truly a terrifying pattern, especially in the cases of missing and murdered indigenous people. thank you for touching on this, it's rare to find channels that speak about cases like this while addressing systemic issues.
@jordannewman177
@jordannewman177 6 ай бұрын
There is no systematic racism in either country.
@brkctrl
@brkctrl 4 ай бұрын
@@jordannewman177only a white person would say that, I don’t suppose that means anything to you. It’s one of those, if it doesn’t happen to me or my family, it doesn’t exist.
@PhonkJesus
@PhonkJesus 4 ай бұрын
​@@jordannewman177 >yt people say the darndest things
@Nothingseen
@Nothingseen 3 ай бұрын
@@jordannewman177 there is no war in ba bing se
@dapperbunch5029
@dapperbunch5029 3 ай бұрын
@@brkctrlOnly a non white person would attribute systemic oppression to their own failures.
@bee7137
@bee7137 Жыл бұрын
As soon as I heard RCMP I already knew how this was going to go. It's just rage-inducing the treatment that indigenous people get in this country and the complete lack of care from police officials and the government is astounding.
@your1supporter
@your1supporter Жыл бұрын
​@@NickyBlue99Don't be so heartless and cruel, Pale Face.
@micadean1600
@micadean1600 Жыл бұрын
@@NickyBlue99bigot
@julz3tt3
@julz3tt3 Жыл бұрын
Agreed the RCMP are useless. All that time elapsed had allowed the obvious dodgy creature posing as a person with a too good to be true job setting his sights on a poor and desperate indigenous family in the late 1970s early 1980s. That amount of time could allow the creep to kill and bury the family in the snowy Forrest or leave them in the snowy province, to succumb to the elements. Drown them in the lake in body bags.... Somewhere cold and the snow fell over the years on their corpses..
@john-ic5pz
@john-ic5pz Жыл бұрын
well, Canada, Aus, and USA are all Britain Jr. so what can we expect? 😢
@BSLS123
@BSLS123 Жыл бұрын
What does RCMP stand for?? I understand it is the police?
@charleendavis8171
@charleendavis8171 Жыл бұрын
As a young Indigenous woman I can't thank you enough for shining a light on this case. I am in law enforcement in the US and have been fascinated by this case since I first heard about it. If I was a retired detective I would dedicate the rest of my life searching for these poor people, that apparently no one cares about, except their remaining families and communities. I have a little experience with being thought unworthy due to being Native and it is just unexceptable, in this day and age, especially when two little boys were involved. 💔😔😪
@wakranich3488
@wakranich3488 Жыл бұрын
Women in this country are treated w/disrespect..
@magiv4205
@magiv4205 Жыл бұрын
​@@Cokehead_Drug_Addict_ZelenskyHow dare you. If you don't have anything non-racist to contribute, leave.
@Raptor810Blue
@Raptor810Blue Жыл бұрын
Is racism really that bad for indigenous North Americans?
@charleendavis8171
@charleendavis8171 Жыл бұрын
@@Raptor810Blue It's actually quite bad in America but it seems worse in Canada. Google Indigenous residential school deaths in Canada. The number of Indigenous deaths of children is horrific and they find their bodies in mass graves under the old school buildings. Today many Indigenous people are still very much treated like second class citizens. As a 28 year old half Indigenous, half white, University educated woman i still experience quite a lot of racially motivated disrespect. It can get discouraging.
@Charlieeliza
@Charlieeliza Жыл бұрын
Do you mean unacceptable? 😊
@JackieBaisa
@JackieBaisa 10 ай бұрын
Incredible film. I'm from Washington State, just below BC and spend a lot of time there. There are SO many missing indigenous peoples there. I don't understand it, but of course, it's still a bit of the "Wild West" here on the rugged, far, Pacific coast. Thanks again for this. And I look forward to your next video. Cheers!
@Abstract
@Abstract 10 ай бұрын
Thank you 🙏 I really appreciate it!
@Randy.Bobandy
@Randy.Bobandy 6 ай бұрын
🙄🙄
@JackieBaisa
@JackieBaisa 6 ай бұрын
@@Randy.Bobandy?
@rapmonkeyxl
@rapmonkeyxl 3 ай бұрын
why couldn't you give that money to a african american that is oppressed by americans?
@JackieBaisa
@JackieBaisa 3 ай бұрын
Don't even get me started, bruh
@yutastown
@yutastown Жыл бұрын
the RCMP stating the family had been “found” when they haven’t and publishing misinformation pisses me off so bad 😭
@JustAllinOneResource
@JustAllinOneResource 7 ай бұрын
I live in Canada, Born, and raised. I'm now in my 60's, and believe me when I say this is just the tip of the iceberg. The RCMP in every province are the worst you will come across. They have ruined so many lives in Canada who they say they serve. They don't serve anyone except their interests. I suggest that if you do live in Canada or wishing to visit Canada, take this advice, do not trust any RCMP officer you come across. Never trust them.
@ivanwilliammervinhenry4068
@ivanwilliammervinhenry4068 3 ай бұрын
Protecting who. A red haired man that is who. Abbotsford 1995-1996. Quess who.
@SilvrRazorFeather
@SilvrRazorFeather Жыл бұрын
It is absolutely horrific the level of desperation someone has to be in to jump on a "job" offer like that from a stranger. It reeked of ill intent from the get go, but then to offer child care and a ride out for the whole family is just an entirely different level of manipulation. I can't imagine what circumstances would drive me to take that risk. I do really wonder though, why Robbie didn't get an address, company name, or contact number at all to relay to his mother, especially with that last comment on the phone. He knew there was something suspicious, even if the remark was meant as a joke it's rooted in concern. I really do wish for any information on this case to arise, the family and community deserve closer after all this time.
@jason.larsenthedanishgreek1226
@jason.larsenthedanishgreek1226 Жыл бұрын
Yea but she blamed institutional racism so f WHT people right? Lol it's not our fault he put his family at risk
@numberone2676
@numberone2676 11 ай бұрын
@@jason.larsenthedanishgreek1226 hush cry baby
@LA-ug4gk
@LA-ug4gk 10 ай бұрын
​​let's not act as if people of color aren't put at a disadvantage because of colonialism. You are more likely to sympathize with people who look like you, that is a fact. Argo the media and police force, mostly white, aren't going to care about cases revolving around minorities as much as their own race. And it is nobody's fault, in the families disappearance, but the person that took them, HE is the one who planned it, HE is the one that lied to them, and ultimately made them disappear. The father acted in desperation, for what he thought was the betterment of his children. There is no such thing as a perfect victim, and the fact that you rather blame the father than the PERPETRATOR speaks volumes. But yeah keep talking about how white people are somehow the victims of this story and not the missing family. You are disgusting.
@lewislewis6936
@lewislewis6936 10 ай бұрын
​@jason.larsenthedanishgreek1226 Did you stop watching the video halfway through? Of course the problems in this case stems in institutional racism. 1. The father would've and taken the risk if he wasn't in poverty that is extremely common in Native Americans because of how few enoconmics
@lewislewis6936
@lewislewis6936 10 ай бұрын
Economic opportunities they are given
@Y2KNW
@Y2KNW 4 ай бұрын
The idea of day care at a logging camp might sound weird but on a summer vacation in the BC interior in '84 or '85, we took a wrong turn and ended up on a logging road, at the end of which was a logging camp that looked more like a campground there were so many campers and families. We were allowed to stay for a couple days because the people running the camp were really nice and understood how we got there (and dad just happened to have a few bottles of rye in the camper..) but there were dozens of kids of all ages. That kind of camp existed so It's not completely outside the realm of possibility for a job prospect to include daycare, which would really make a the Husqvarna guy's story believable.
@appleteeth2915
@appleteeth2915 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for highlighting the sort of disappearances that most true crime won't cover.
@Abstract
@Abstract Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I think so much of that has to do with a ‘cycle of apathy’. It’s really hard to report on something that has almost no coverage (because journalists generally don’t deem native people going missing to be interesting), therefore - without any facts around the case - people lose interest and speculate less and police are ultimately less pressured to put more resources into a case. But that cycle in itself is extremely telling.
@FannyLerouxTime
@FannyLerouxTime Жыл бұрын
... I've seen this story many times on other true crime channels.
@Stabity
@Stabity Жыл бұрын
I've heard this story a few times on KZbin as well. You might just not be looking for these kinds of stories. Personally, I'm glad more people cover it and this channel has such great editing and graphics to add more perspective on this case.
@Abstract
@Abstract Жыл бұрын
@@Stabity thank you! I don’t necessarily know that the full facts of this case have been covered but yes, I have seen videos on the Jack family. My big hope is that more content will be created around this. I wrote a 10k word article outlining all the current publicly available info, fully cited, and I really hope it can be used as a basis for a deeper dive, maybe a multi-part podcast or something. My 35 mins is only scratching the surface, the article is much, much more in depth.
@yoshita4140
@yoshita4140 Жыл бұрын
@@Stabity can you tell me the names of the channels that cover these types of stories or this story in particular? i'm an avid true crime watcher and this is the first time i've heard of this case. the algorithm is notorious for suppressing these types of stories and i'd like to expand my horizon!
@r2212xx
@r2212xx Жыл бұрын
Riveting and heartrending. Thank you for bringing such thought-provoking incidents to the attention of a wider audience.
@linkfromzelda1002
@linkfromzelda1002 Жыл бұрын
I'm sorry how much fucking money did you donate!?
@titan_hub
@titan_hub Жыл бұрын
Wow you must really like him, Nice!
@justins794
@justins794 Жыл бұрын
@@titan_hublol that’s 2,000 Indian rupees, so about 24 dollars in United States. Like yes but not 2,000 dollars lol
@titan_hub
@titan_hub Жыл бұрын
Oh, still he very must like him@@justins794
@sanvisingh85
@sanvisingh85 Жыл бұрын
@@justins794 ₹2000 is a lot for most of Indians to just donate it in a video , so.....
@holdommi7505
@holdommi7505 Жыл бұрын
I wasn’t expecting this to turn the way it did. I was just watching some creepy videos for the creepy vibes, but I’m glad you brought up what you did during the highway segment. Thank you for making this and helping me be more aware of this issue. You’re right that these issues are not just happening in a vacuum. What this family and millions of others have been put through for the past several centuries up until today is truly real horror.
@zaneplatt3533
@zaneplatt3533 7 ай бұрын
Would have liked to see a comparison of cases between this highway and others because we get no sense of how disproportionate it actually is...
@JayyJay92
@JayyJay92 Жыл бұрын
The audacity of the man to walk into a bar full of people and sit at the house with family members able to identify him makes me think he’d done it many times to feel comfortable enough to pull it off.
@SH-to8sh
@SH-to8sh Жыл бұрын
it sounds to me Ronnie is the one who often got his family into trouble too. Beating on his wife, drinking away precious dollars at a pub and finally accepting a job offer only to have him and his family never to be seen again. This was just a concoction of bad decisions leading up to something sinister.
@txkoutdoorfam6911
@txkoutdoorfam6911 11 ай бұрын
Yeah, not saying he’s a genius in anyway, but he’s so sure no one will notice him, he must live far far away. Or he’s dumb! Well he’s Dumb regardless! Even if he was a genius, showing your face at a bar with a guy you’re about to make disappear is unbelievably ignorant!
@raerohan4241
@raerohan4241 10 ай бұрын
​@@txkoutdoorfam6911 I don't think he's a genius. I think he just targets people he knows people won't be looking for (indigenous). No one's stopped him before, why should he be worried about someone stopping him now, is what I think he thought before he made these decisions
@Badficwriter
@Badficwriter 10 ай бұрын
@@SH-to8sh There's no evidence the man targeted the rest of the family either. The man targeted RONNIE. Ronnie was a drunk and desperate. You wouldn't need to know him to realize he was an easy mark. Then Ronnie brought up his wife. "Well, bring her too! They need more people, she can be trained on the job." Then Ronnie hesitated because of the kids. "Well, they got camp ladies doing cooking who watch each others' kids. Its no problem." The rest of the family were endangered because RONNIE wanted them with him.
@SH-to8sh
@SH-to8sh 10 ай бұрын
The crazy thing is, I now believe this whole case could seemingly still be innocent. Imagine if he really was a logger at a struggling company and needed men to do trial work before fully committing? I believe the man told Ronnie that the job was only for 10 days. The eerie thing is we have no evidence of anyone hiring or a mysterious man going missing. No car crash or bodies, So it likely is foul play,, I'm not trying to stick up for the man but the bush area and a car crash is def still being considered a possibility combined with alcohol.@@Badficwriter
@terrycore
@terrycore 4 ай бұрын
you earned my respect for this one it’s very much a victim-centered approach with candidness on the specific roadblocks indigenous people face as well as law enforcement incompetence. You’re a highly competent filmmaker, your work is better than a lot of TV “true crime” productions
@grapeshot
@grapeshot Жыл бұрын
Kind of reminds me of the case here in Ohio where you had a guy offering people a job to work on his farm. But come to find out he was a straight-up serial killer.
@grapeshot
@grapeshot Жыл бұрын
@@Abstract I think this serial killer got his victims by placing ads on Craigslist.
@Shane3599
@Shane3599 Жыл бұрын
Do you mean Richard Beasley?
@JensenWinchester1
@JensenWinchester1 Жыл бұрын
was this the guy who "hired" another desperate couple similar to this one and then immediately killed the man once they arrived and kept the girl in a shipping container torturing her? Or am I thinking of yet another story
@PlutoTheGod
@PlutoTheGod Жыл бұрын
Was that the same or another as the guy who owned like a closed down farm and would tell people it was a club or something, invite homeless women, drug them so they couldn’t leave the party and then chop them up on the farm
@ArnisKaye
@ArnisKaye Жыл бұрын
​@@JensenWinchester1You're thinking of Todd Kohlhepp in South Carolina. It was two couples at separate times. With the first couple, he ended up killing the woman too because she kept fighting back.
@kilikena09
@kilikena09 Жыл бұрын
Man, as a Canadian I got chills at this “but somebody does…and whoever that person is, chances are they’re still out there” yikes, really got me thinking. What an incredibly sad story though.
@saysomethincute
@saysomethincute Жыл бұрын
This video made me so sad. I've lived in BC my whole life and it's an absolute travesty the continued deaths of these people and the lack of action by our government. We have so much more progress to make. Thank you for shining a light on this case and the highway of tears in general.
@barneyronnie
@barneyronnie Жыл бұрын
Are you indigenous, or a descendant of the marauding killers?
@grimrose999
@grimrose999 Жыл бұрын
It's not just a lack of action. Our government has funded the kidnapping of Indigenous Children in the past, in the name of destroying indigenous language and culture. Those in power in our government are choosing to look the other way, if they aren't actively involved.
@grimrose999
@grimrose999 Жыл бұрын
@@barneyronnie Or neither? Not every person who eventually immigrated to Canada were part of the Colonization/Theft of Indigenous Lands and Murder of Indigenous People. Some immigrated to Canada as a refuge from the horrors, and religious conflicts in their previous homes.
@fairlyregretful
@fairlyregretful 8 ай бұрын
the second i heard B.C. and saw their photos, i knew what kind of “vanishing” we were discussing. investigators repeatedly fail indigenous men, women, children and families and don’t care to bring them home safe. it is a sickening and sobering truth about our home and Native land.
@cmur2
@cmur2 Жыл бұрын
Amazing work. Very chilling. The police's incompetence and severe mishandling of this case creates a whole new type of horror. May the Jack family find peace.
@larapalma3744
@larapalma3744 Жыл бұрын
Seems very common in these
@Peekaboo-Kitty
@Peekaboo-Kitty Жыл бұрын
Well there's very little the Police can do if you *carelessly* place yourself in danger! I mean seriously, who invites a TOTAL STRANGER into their home and entrusts their wife and children into their hands?
@redred222
@redred222 Жыл бұрын
@@Peekaboo-Kitty you dont understand how bad those people have it do you, most of them do not have cars or trucks, so they have to hitch hike, jobs are almost impossible to find, have you ever been on tribe land its like a third world country and people in Canada could care less about those people there just natives who cares right
@wakranich3488
@wakranich3488 Жыл бұрын
The killings keep going on down this highway. If they cared they would make an effort to do something.
@Beriririi
@Beriririi Жыл бұрын
​@@Peekaboo-KittyYou SMELL of privilege
@strega1159
@strega1159 Жыл бұрын
thank you so much for including the abuse and neglect of indigenous peoples by the Canadian police system, not a lot of people know about these injustices and it is a breath of fresh air to see a big channel talk about it.
@grimrose999
@grimrose999 Жыл бұрын
I feel like it's because there is so much focus on the racism and corruption of law enforcement in the USA, that the horrible crimes committed by the Canadian Police System gets swept under the rug. A lot of Canadians pat themselves on the back saying that we aren't as bad as the USA, but that's just willful ignorance. I remember when I was young finding out about Canadian History Of Residential Schools for the Indigenous Children. It disgusts me how our own government funded the kidnapping, abuse of Indigenous children, while also trying to destroy their language and culture. The blood of those children is on the hands of the adults that allowed such atrocities to be carried out.
@wakranich3488
@wakranich3488 Жыл бұрын
It happens in America too. Really sad part is indigenous people were here before white came but white people have the gall to say no more immigrants can come here.. All white people are the immigrants..
@jennifer60515
@jennifer60515 Жыл бұрын
I had no idea about this situation, but do they perform better and more thorough investigations now?
@froodcariad6399
@froodcariad6399 10 ай бұрын
I have lived in BC my whole life. Most folks from here can't cover these stories with this kind of compassion and nuance. Thank you for telling this story with such depth
@SaiCaz23
@SaiCaz23 Жыл бұрын
"Some people are worthy of shining a light on, while others belong in the dark" a matter of fact and reality amongst natives being a victim of crime or even on unequal opportunity. Heart goes out to the Jack family and indegenous people everywhere.
@guyanomaly
@guyanomaly Жыл бұрын
Your production quality is immaculate, and I can’t commend you enough for your acknowledgement of First Nations peoples’ struggles at the hands of the RCMP and media outlets. Thank you for doing this. I hope you can keep going.
@boink5226
@boink5226 Жыл бұрын
This one really struck a chord in my heart. Those poor souls deserved better. Thank you for covering this ❤
@hozhokait
@hozhokait Жыл бұрын
I remember my family teaching me about this case when I was younger, this case has always haunted me as an Indigenous person. It just contributed to my understanding of how our community remained underrepresented or cared for. These stories are chilling and untold so I appreciate you sharing this on your platform. We can’t forget about these people.
@candlelightlove
@candlelightlove Жыл бұрын
all your work is incredible, but this one is especially important. the lack of importance and care around crimes committed against indigenous people needs to be talked about more. systemic racism needs to end. these communities deserve justice, coverage and love.
@Ali-ke8ij
@Ali-ke8ij 10 ай бұрын
Out of all the video essay creators that I have watched, this channel is my favourite.Everything is of high quality, the research,modelling and editing are all very good.But there are many other channels that also has those qualities.But this channel takes the cake for the most important thing in the making of video essays,narration.The way her voice carries so much emotion,you can feel the sadness in her voice and in the story itself.The way she makes you feel for these people that you've never even heard before and I'm over here feeling depressed, sad and angry just because of her script and narration.All this is just to say thank you for this top of the notch content.Thank you for sharing the stories that barely anyone has ever even heard about that are just as important as the famous ones.All around just a big thank you and keep up the content!
@cadiehockenbary1588
@cadiehockenbary1588 Жыл бұрын
You did this family justice and that is so appreciated.
@aaadawg14
@aaadawg14 Жыл бұрын
Your content is incredible, I really appreciate your in-depth research, sympathy to victims, and diligent research. Everything about your content and channel are just spectacular!
@nickiewilson9134
@nickiewilson9134 Жыл бұрын
😢Sounds like Vancouver author Eve Lazarus, I've read many of her books Murder by Milkshake, Victoria and Vancouver history.
@timhall5382
@timhall5382 Жыл бұрын
@@stephenalex4345 ha! Apparently simpletons don't understand arrogance plus ignorance equals hilarious. I get it, ignorance is bliss. Might as well stay ignorant.
@c-puff
@c-puff 11 ай бұрын
My friend from Poland often uses a term of "The less Dead". It's a psychology the media and law enforcement have where certain people who befall violent ends (Prostitutes, indigenous peoples, homeless people etc etc) are "less dead" than other, more acceptable victims. It's a term I feel is very appropriate as it illustrates the callousness and lack of empathy these institutions have towards certain victims. So much so that they will categorise these victims in their heads as "not as dead as other victims". It shines a light on the hypocrisy. Unless of course, these same institutions do not understand the shame of this phrase, in which case the problem is far far worse than any of us might be willing to believe.
@RaytardtheUntrainable
@RaytardtheUntrainable 11 ай бұрын
It’s a waste of time to even give them a separate word. Their just corpses now worthless corpses.
@AYVYN
@AYVYN 10 ай бұрын
@@RaytardtheUntrainableWell, Raytard. At least they had to die to become worthless.
@JSpyx
@JSpyx Жыл бұрын
Oh man, the animations are sooo good. It really improves more and more. Always amazing seeing this much work and time you put in these videos. Not to mention that if you don't trust something or a source, you keep on searching deeper until you know 100% sure. Like MANUALLY checking all those news articles, rather than giving up if there isn't a search result. Mad respects, really.
@marikafasola8771
@marikafasola8771 Жыл бұрын
someone paid for it
@hannahp1108
@hannahp1108 Жыл бұрын
This was absolutely phenomenal in every way. This police investigation would be hilarious if it wasn't so horrifically tragic. I really can't believe I've never heard of this family and this moved me so so so so deeply
@Peekaboo-Kitty
@Peekaboo-Kitty Жыл бұрын
Well there's very little the Police can do if you *carelessly* place yourself in danger! I mean seriously, who invites a TOTAL STRANGER into their home and entrusts their wife and children into their hands?
@hannahp1108
@hannahp1108 Жыл бұрын
@@Peekaboo-Kitty You really didn't listen to this video, did yyou
@JuliasCesar
@JuliasCesar 3 ай бұрын
BRITISH COLUMBIAN HERE. What’s crazy about this whole case was that they went missing near the Highway of Tears. It’s a dense think forested highway that’s quite desolate and long. You don’t see much traffic on there and you’ll probably pass cars every few hours and as a local even from Vancouver you know not to drive it at night. Only truckers run that route and the oddball willing to do it. Lots of people have been killed and found dead along there or go missing and be found naked and assaulted regardless of gender and killed in a terrible way. Lots of boys went missing in the cities and found up there. Indigenous say it’s some sinister beings out there. Locals think it’s killers and other nefarious types.
@Justapikachu577
@Justapikachu577 15 күн бұрын
Did you watch the video? She literally gives an ENTIRE section to it, and the indigenous dont say its some "sinister beings". The indigenous know what it is. Why do you think its called the highway of TEARS.
@jettanyx1
@jettanyx1 Жыл бұрын
This is the first I’ve found your channel . I love you calm and detailed narration, respect for the victims and family, and touch of sarcasm at the investigators
@StefanTonioSampson
@StefanTonioSampson Жыл бұрын
VERY well done piece not only about the family's disapperence, but also putting it in some context within Canada's ptoblematic relationship with it's indigenous natives
@alexk9185
@alexk9185 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering this. As a Canadian- its unbelievable how racist our population is toward indigenous people. They get almost no media coverage and they go through some of the worst possible things. Its sad what happened to this family and it definitely could have been handled differently. If they were white they most likely would have had a bigger media presence...
@raphaellavictoria01
@raphaellavictoria01 11 ай бұрын
what evidence is there that there was racism involved? There was no evidence of a crime. Yes, they didn't contact their family but then again, these were adults. I see no evidence that the "indifference" was due to racism, as opposed to anything else, such as, nobody wants to believe such a strange, unusual crime has been committed.
@assrammington7961
@assrammington7961 11 ай бұрын
If they were white they’d be demonized for simply existing out of some retarded and misplaced social justice attempt by brainwashed leftists and the Marxists that are pulling their strings Causing a successful, inventive and awesome ppl like the Caucasian people to self loathe over the last 30-40 years is the tiny hats greatest accomplishment
@schmoferino
@schmoferino 11 ай бұрын
​@@raphaellavictoria01So many people comment to go all "erm this is an unusual crime? How is it racist? Who cares" to muddy the conversation. they're uncomfortable with the idea that their nation silently sweeps foreigners and the poor indigenous folk under the rug. there have been schools found to house geaveyards of bodies, mostly indigenous. keep dancing around the screaming truth, it's entertaining
@Petey0707
@Petey0707 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for proving his point, bigot. You're exactly the type of person to support murderous cops who intentionally kill unarmed people of color then say, "they aren't racist they were just doing their jobs!". There's a word for that... bootlicker. @@raphaellavictoria01
@doomsdaybooty1072
@doomsdaybooty1072 10 ай бұрын
I mean I agree about our horrific and racist past... but to say that this topic gets no media coverage... I mean you must not get cbc where you live. It is most definitely something that's frequently covered, and has been my entire adult life. People get frustrated because the causes to these situations are multifaceted and really hard to fix, and want to jump to the conclusion that there must be public apathy or an unwillingness to try and address the problem. The truth is even worse: people do care, and the governments throw money at it, but the problems are so entrenched and difficult to fix...
@thatoneasian1021
@thatoneasian1021 Жыл бұрын
Your work quality is phenomenal, happy to see another upload
@honeycrispsnail4032
@honeycrispsnail4032 Жыл бұрын
i’m native from northern michigan, and this case hurts me, it’s so tragic. i still can’t believe the police, media, and the public are still so disinterested in this case. thank you so much for shedding light on it.
@MinimyoCaly
@MinimyoCaly 10 ай бұрын
I could listen to you narrate literally anything. Everything about your narration is so pleasing and adds to the tension of the stories.
@jonathan___4684
@jonathan___4684 Жыл бұрын
I don't normally comment on KZbin videos but I just want to thank you for such an amazingly well researched and produced upload. I'm blown away this is free to watch, absolutely fascinating to watch. Thank you!
@WahooYahoo
@WahooYahoo Жыл бұрын
I appreciate you not only talking about minority victims , but going into detail at how so many institutions failed minority victims. You didn’t have to make a video about this family nor one talking about the dangers natives face, but you did, and I applaud you for it.
@thetruth1862
@thetruth1862 Жыл бұрын
The continued awful and indifferent treatment of Native Americans and First Nations peoples is beyond gross and disrespectful it's tragic 😮😮
@coltonwesley4460
@coltonwesley4460 Жыл бұрын
This is excellent. I'm glad you talked about the underlying causes for why this case didn't receive attention from press or police. It doesn't get talked about enough in this context.
@scroopynoopers.
@scroopynoopers. Жыл бұрын
The way you approached this story...the truth of how it was fumbled by racist authorities and so many cases are. I just have huge respect for you. Thank you.
@hunniedpeaches
@hunniedpeaches Жыл бұрын
Thank you for taking the time to make a video about this case and dip into issues like MMIW, the highway of tears, the 60s Scoop/residential schools and generational trauma. So many Canadians refuse to take these issues seriously and it’s infuriating. Videos and commentary like this are very important to continue spreading the word and getting people to think critically about these issues. Great video, thank you
@TeaSpiracy
@TeaSpiracy Жыл бұрын
I love the amazing editing. People have no idea how much effort and time this takes. You have a gift for sure!
@Abstract
@Abstract Жыл бұрын
Ha, no kidding. That one calendar transition scene towards the end nearly made me throw my PC out the window 😂
@Bucky_Winchester
@Bucky_Winchester 9 ай бұрын
I really appreciate what you're doing with your channel. You go the extra mile to deliver high quality documentaries of these tragic stories and seem to care a lot about each and everyone involved. Thank you very much for your great effort. Keep up the good work, you are exceptional.
@MaeStolte
@MaeStolte Жыл бұрын
Your content continues to capture my attention in ways few others can manage. Thank you for providing the necessary context to this incident as well. Too many people become victimized in stories very similar to this one and go neglected and forgotten by the institutions put there to protect them.
@PorkShark
@PorkShark 6 ай бұрын
My theory is Unknown Man is already dead. If he was in his late 30s then, means he's 70+ now. Especially when people in physical labor jobs don't have the longest life expectancies
@humayrafaizah1428
@humayrafaizah1428 Жыл бұрын
Wow I can't believe RCMP mistakenly closed the case basing on their flippant assumptions and disgusting prejudice. I mean they are known for their incompetency but this was next level ridiculous how they botched the investigation in the initial stage. Simply heartbreaking to have seen Doreen's sister break into tears. As if they haven't suffered enough already! Props to you guys for your brilliant work and how you laid this case bare. The narrator is supremely talented and her dedication and commitment reflects through the video. Moreover she didn't hesitate to show her compassion and empathy towards the victims and in essence, natives in Canada who take the hit and I think that's very commendable. Most narrators just read from the script but she seemed really connected to her content. The morbid undertone combined with exceptional research makes this one of the most well-made and thorough videos based on Jack family disappearance! I know chances are very slim but I just hope their loved ones receive some closure. 34 years is not a joke!
@its4riel710
@its4riel710 Жыл бұрын
Your stories are the rare ones that I don't see elsewhere or on news. You're narrating is amazing!!! Keep it up!
@riedecantrell7544
@riedecantrell7544 11 ай бұрын
I really, really appreciate how detailed, careful, and respectful this coverage is. I had stopped watching true crime because the coverage of it felt extractive and gruesome, but your thumbnail caught my eye and I'm glad it did. Thank you for investing the time to do this (delicate!) production correctly.
@brandyjean7015
@brandyjean7015 Жыл бұрын
All I know is that the Jack family should not be forgotten; just because it suits the RCMP.
@sugarinq
@sugarinq Жыл бұрын
YESSSSS A NEW REAL HORROR VID! This one is so close to home i live in the same province it occured.. I want to thank you for giving the family a voice and shedding light on the horrific systemic mistreatment of the indigenous population. It is a huge problem here and it is not talked about enough!
@mirka4285
@mirka4285 Жыл бұрын
I was so surprised when you mentioned the mystery man was seen wearing a Husqvarna jacket. They're common workwear here in Sweden but I've never seen the brand worn or mentioned outside of it. The logical part of my brain is telling me Husqvarna is a company exporting products all over the world, the conspiratorial part wonders if the mystery man might have been of Swedish or at least European origin.
@asahelnettleton9044
@asahelnettleton9044 Жыл бұрын
I'm in the central United States and there are Husqvarna chainsaws commonly sold here. My favorite hatchet is Husqvarna too.
@thegreencat9947
@thegreencat9947 Жыл бұрын
@@asahelnettleton9044 Here in North Idaho..Husqvarna is a prestigious name in engines...chain saws... I have a great lawn mower made by them.🙄
@c.w.8200
@c.w.8200 Жыл бұрын
I had no idea Husqvarna is Swedish, I'm European too, it's such a ubiquitous brand, nobody asks where it's from, as a German speaker I have no idea what to make of that name tbh, could be from anywhere 🤷
@billyboyrebel6307
@billyboyrebel6307 Жыл бұрын
Just wanna say, you voice is the most perfect thing ever to tell such stories, calm, smooth, almost like a whisper, you can feel the eeriness and horrors you’re about to tell us before even telling us
@curtissjamesd
@curtissjamesd 3 ай бұрын
7:57 as soon as I heard "The RCMP" I knew that it was going to be a half assed investigation..
@cozyfrogASMR
@cozyfrogASMR Жыл бұрын
My grandma lost her brother in the war & for almost 40 years they waited to know what happened to him. It's not the same but hearing my grandmother tell me the story of then waiting for years not knowing if he died, was captured, or what, just waiting to know anything and when they finally knew what happened the war was over (it was like 2007 ish) & the US military could tell them semi what happened. I can't imagine knowing something happened to a loved one and waiting. The pain sounds so unbearable never knowing sounds so painful. It breaks my heart that systematic injustice really played a massive part in this story. It seems so simple to go "hey just don't close this case there's not enough evidence," but they did. Over and over so many mistakes were made and intentional or not bc of that this family can't get the closure they deserve. I send so much love to this family and to everyone whos had justice fail bc the system does not let your voice speak.
@rapmonkeyxl
@rapmonkeyxl 3 ай бұрын
hi
@QueAwkwardNoises
@QueAwkwardNoises Жыл бұрын
Your channel is by far one of my favourites. Very thorough, very respectful, and very informative. I could wait 5 years for a 10 minute docu from you!
@inferPlaying
@inferPlaying Жыл бұрын
Your work put into this channel is incredible, level of production, visual, audio etc. is just amazing, I have no words. Please keep doing what you do, this is very much needed and appreciated.
@fragrantbloom
@fragrantbloom Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. I'm an immigrant woman living by myself. Although this country is "safe" as an immigrant, single, woman I'd never feel completely safe. Even if I go missing, no one would fight for me here.
@zaneleposh
@zaneleposh Жыл бұрын
💔
@doomsdaybooty1072
@doomsdaybooty1072 10 ай бұрын
I mean, wouldn't you say that would be true in any country, if you were a new immigrant without many friends yet? Or do you think canada is worse than the average country in that regard?
@BlueTemplex
@BlueTemplex Жыл бұрын
As a Canadian im so fucking sickened by the lack of policework that went into this at the beginning, and thank you for shining light on the residential schools and the generations of trauma that the Indigenous People have to endure. This needs to be seen by way more people.
@cowboy6586
@cowboy6586 4 ай бұрын
As an indigenous Canadian, I can tell u the RCMP really don’t give a shit doesn’t matter what race actually, they rarely do their jobs properly. If they have to actually work they won’t Edit: I’ve met Doreen, she’s so sweet and her and her family deserve so much better than what they got On residential schools: my great grandparents and grandparents were in residential school and it’s absolutely devastating to think of what they went through. To this day I can’t speak Nêhiyawak and my grandparents won’t due to trauma. It’s absolutely horrible and I feel for everyone affected, whether they were in a residential school or had family members there.
@nayabay
@nayabay Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for thoroughly explaining the troubles in Canada regarding systemic racism and genocide. These stories can't properly be told without an understanding of the atrocities of the past and how the system still operates with many of the same ideas today. I'm an indigenous person myself, when I saw the thumbnail for this video - to be honest I first clicked it to see if this story would be told, adequately shedding light on our disgusting Canadian history. Thank you so much for your comprehensive telling of the whole picture, it's often only anecdotal in other media. 🙏
@staticfries7319
@staticfries7319 Жыл бұрын
This entire video is on a whole other level of perfection. I was hooked the entire time but the last few minutes of your narration was truly something different. The combination of atmosphere, photo, music and your voice created something haunting, hopeful and tragically poetic. Yes, they may be gone but they are not forgotten and here's hoping the truth comes out in our lifetime. Everyone deserves to come home, everyone deserves justice and we will find the answers some day.
@AwokenEntertainment
@AwokenEntertainment Жыл бұрын
really hope to see a follow up with some better news about this case.. crazy how a whole family goes missing like that..
@Clownpunx.
@Clownpunx. Жыл бұрын
You are my new favourite channel. I found you recently and your video quality is just impeccable. Thank you so much for covering this case. There is a continuous issue of missing and murdered indigenous people in Canada and they never, ever get enough media coverage. Your voice is important.
@larsvonrinpoche1229
@larsvonrinpoche1229 Жыл бұрын
New subscriber here. Great job. Canadian here who has never heard of this family disappearance...Ive lived in B.C for years as well.. in different areas. RCMP needs to be dismantled. Toxic leaders.
@komradechampa348
@komradechampa348 24 күн бұрын
I am from BC, have lived here nearly 40 years, and I have honestly never heard of this. Just shows how little attention cases involving first nations get in this country.
@celiazheng3048
@celiazheng3048 Жыл бұрын
I was hooked from the vid about Helios 522 and binged your channel you have amazing content and I’m glad we can understand these tragedies in depth. Keep doing what you’re doing Real Horror❤
@pacifisht9797
@pacifisht9797 Жыл бұрын
Please continue to talk about cases that don't get a ton of media coverage, you never know who these videos may reach and if it can help solve cases and spread awareness. Great work.
@imjustvisiting5397
@imjustvisiting5397 Жыл бұрын
The pain of indigenous people is so heartbreaking and angering. First their land is stolen, their people are killed in masses, they are made addicted to alcohol, their children are abducted, raped, and abused, their language and culture is destroyed, and now entire families are vanishing. Horrible just horrible. I don’t even have words…
@kelleh711
@kelleh711 Жыл бұрын
The writing for this video is extremely impressive, definitely subscribing to you! Thank you so much for talking about institutionalized racism
@sofiasaaand8083
@sofiasaaand8083 Жыл бұрын
you dont have many videos out yet but i can already tell this is going to be (if not already tbh) one of the best true crime docu channels on youtube, you speak on the cases with such respect for the victims and family and i really like how you so far have made videos on less well known cases such as this one. bringing up the issues that indiginous people in canada phase. i hope you keep it up and your channel continues to grow
@jameswhite7997
@jameswhite7997 Ай бұрын
Im relatively new to this channel (this is only the second video Ive watched) and I have to say this deserves an award! The content, research and way its made with empathy and intelligence is outstanding.
@PenguinVideoStore
@PenguinVideoStore Жыл бұрын
It makes me sick as a Canadian to think about how little this case was investigated. I really wish we had a genuine disappearance pattern system, like that investigator described. Our RCMP and judicial system are nothing more than jokes.
@PenguinVideoStore
@PenguinVideoStore Жыл бұрын
@@pianorelaxingmusics What the hell are you talking about? There's decades of blatant proof of the Canadian police purposely ignoring Indigenous cases OR EVEN targeting Indigenous peoples, but you're trying to tell me the latter just...brought it on themselves? FOH
@leviisfine6829
@leviisfine6829 Жыл бұрын
@@pianorelaxingmusicsum what?!?! Now that’s just not true like okay sometimes they don’t pay attention to cases that aren’t from natives but it’s mostly unlikely cause it’s mostly natives they throw under the rug especially since this was back then, the racism back then was so bad idk why you’d say that…
@your1supporter
@your1supporter Жыл бұрын
​@@pianorelaxingmusicsDoes the word "DISPROPORTIONATELY" mean anything to you? Cry all you want but Native Americans are DISPROPORTIONATELY go missing and rarely given any news or media coverage. So STFU.
@Abstract
@Abstract Жыл бұрын
@@pianorelaxingmusicsunfortunately evidence points to the opposite.
@greg6924
@greg6924 Жыл бұрын
This is some of the best content on KZbin. Incredible presentation, delivery, and animation. Bravo!
@hardlo7146
@hardlo7146 10 ай бұрын
Having just seen Killers of the Flower Moon, this hits even harder. I think the fact that the Anglo-European colonizers did such a thorough job at exterminating the native peoples of North America, its hard to remember these events since I don't think I have even met a Native American. Visibility and representation is so badly needed so we may remember these events. Thank you for this video.
@wulfsorenson8859
@wulfsorenson8859 10 ай бұрын
There’s no such thing as native ‘American’ since the nation of America didn’t exist till it was built from the ground up by settlers from Europe. Most of the continent that was settled was an uninhabited wilderness with a small population of primitive warring tribes who practiced slavery and genocide against each other on the regular. They were far from the utopian nature worshipping hippies of your imagining... Also they were not ‘exterminated’ by the settlers from Europe. Large numbers died from small pox transmission. Stop spreading racist blood libels and Marxist propaganda against white Europeans.
@FlymanMS
@FlymanMS 10 ай бұрын
@@wulfsorenson8859 wow you truly showed what a tool you are and what kind of garbage your head is filled with
@soda8665
@soda8665 Жыл бұрын
thank you. thank you so much for making this video, for making the effort to do extensive research on this family. even though i'm living in canada (not B.C) i have never heard of this case until last year. my heart breaks for the father with an unspeakable weight on his shoulders, the mother that loved all with an open heart, and their two beautiful children. i wish maria and her family the best. as a native person, you learn to put the reality that if you were murdered or went missing, there's a large possibility that your case would not be solved, at the back of your mind. it seems like an inevitability. if not you, then it will be someone you know. when i saw jennifer catcheway's photo at the 26 minute mark, i felt a knot loosen in my chest. her photo was posted around my reserve. she is so familiar to me, yet i never knew her. i hope these families get answers.
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