RCMP failed to proactively publicize Lisa's case
Summary
RCMP failed to proactively publicize Lisa's case or otherwise raise awareness of her disappearance. It was, instead, Lisa's parents who informed the media and continued to keep people talking about Lisa using various methods including posters, media interviews, billboards, and annual walks, for decades.
Detail
RCMP made no media statement related to Lisa's disappearance until after Lisa's family, frustrated with the lack of police concern, reported her disappearance to local newspapers. Updates provided to the media were generally only reactive to journalist inquiries.
Lisa's parents first contacted the Nanaimo Daily News, and reporter Paul Walton rushed over to interview the Youngs.[3]
The next morning, Lisa's disappearance was the headline.[1] Paul authored more articles about Lisa's story than any other journalist, with at least two dozen published stories, not counting syndication.[2]
More recently, the RCMP set up two press conferences, but they were reactively aligned with pre-existing plans by the family to proceed with their annual "Walk for Lisa" which would start at the Nanaimo RCMP detachment.[5][6][4][7]
Sources
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Paul Walton, Nanaimo Daily News (Jul 4, 2002), "Parents fear daughter the victim of foul play"
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Paul Walton, Nanaimo Daily News (July 5, 2002),
City woman's whereabouts still unknown
(source) - ↑ Allison Crowe, NWAC (May 1, 2015),
Story Telling - Lisa Marie Young (PDF)
(source) - ↑ 4.0 4.1 Nicholas Pescod, CHEK News (Jun 26, 2021), "Nanaimo RCMP plead for more information regarding disappearance of Lisa Marie Young"
- ↑ RCMP (Jun 25, 2021), "RCMP PR: Update on Lisa Marie Young missing person investigation"
- ↑ Darron Kloster, Times Colonist (Jun 24, 2021), "March to mark 19th anniversary of Nanaimo woman's disappearance"
- ↑ Eric Plummer, Ha-Shilth-Sa (Jul 2, 2021), ""Bring peace to Lisa": Investigators seek missing link"