Call back in 5 days: Difference between revisions
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[[File:hoc20201008_manly_5days.png|300px|thumb|right|border|frame|alt=they said just give it 48 hours|MP Paul Manly, ''House of Commons'', Dec 8, 2020{{HOC20201008.png}}]] | [[File:hoc20201008_manly_5days.png|300px|thumb|right|border|frame|alt=they said just give it 48 hours|MP Paul Manly, ''House of Commons'', Dec 8, 2020{{HOC20201008.png}}]] | ||
Urgency increased the next morning when Lisa failed to show up for her first day of work at a new job she'd been eager to start.{{NDN20020710}} Seeking an update of the RCMP's findings, Lisa's parents tried to contact the officer who'd attended the night before. After several calls they were told that he'd gone on several scheduled days off, and they were advised to call back after that. | Urgency increased the next morning when Lisa failed to show up for her first day of work at a new job she'd been eager to start.{{NDN20020710}} Seeking an update of the RCMP's findings, Lisa's parents tried to contact the officer who'd attended the night before. After several calls they were told that he'd gone on several scheduled days off, and they were advised to call back after that.{{SP20040515}} | ||
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Revision as of 06:53, 17 December 2023
“The officer who took the initial report is away until Friday...”—Nanaimo RCMP to Lisa's parents
July 2, 2002
Summary
After an RCMP officer finally showed up in response to the report of Lisa's disappearance, he picked up a photo of Lisa, and then promptly went on several scheduled days off.
Lisa's parents were informed of this after several unsuccessful attempts to follow up with the attending officer the next morning, and they were advised to call back when the officer was back at work.
Detail
As the day went on and Lisa's parents grew increasingly anxious, they made several more calls to the RCMP that day.[3] Their persistence finally resulted in a uniformed officer stopping by in the evening, though only to pick up a photo of Lisa.Template:NDN20040704[2]
Urgency increased the next morning when Lisa failed to show up for her first day of work at a new job she'd been eager to start.[4] Seeking an update of the RCMP's findings, Lisa's parents tried to contact the officer who'd attended the night before. After several calls they were told that he'd gone on several scheduled days off, and they were advised to call back after that.[5]
The July 4th, 2002 edition of the Nanaimo Daily News, included a quote from RCMP Cst. Murray Conway: "Nothing's come up that would suggest foul play, we just don't know where she is".Template:NDN20040704
By this point, the only known progress by the RCMP was that Lisa's case had been "put on the national police computer".Template:NDN20040704[6]
Sources
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Paul Walton, Nanaimo Daily News (July 4, 2002),
Parents fear daughter the victim of foul play
(src) - ↑ 2.0 2.1 Allison Crowe, NWAC (May 1, 2015),
Story Telling - Lisa Marie Young (PDF)
(source) - ↑ Paul Walton, Nanaimo Daily News (July 5, 2002),
City woman's whereabouts still unknown
(source) - ↑ 4.0 4.1 Paul Walton, Nanaimo Daily News (July 10, 2002),
Police fear local met with foul play
(source) - ↑ Jim Gibson, Star Phoenix (May 15, 2004),
Vanished
(source) - ↑ Eric Plummer, Ha-Shilth-Sa (June 24, 2019), "Legacy of Lisa Marie Young to hang in Tofino" hss20190624