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The Highway of Tears: Decades of Loss on Canada's Highway 16

Dela

Along a 719-kilometer stretch of British Columbia's Highway 16 between Prince George and Prince Rupert, an unknown number of women have vanished or been murdered since 1969. This episode examines how isolated geography, extreme poverty, and systemic government neglect combined to engineer what advocates describe as a hunting ground for predators, in a tragedy now known internationally as the Highway of Tears.

Drawing on task force reports, investigative journalism, and indigenous community impact statements, the discussion covers the forensic challenges of the terrain, the lack of transit and cell coverage that forced vulnerable women to hitchhike, and the disputed victim counts that range from fewer than 18 official cases to over 40 in community estimates. It also confronts the media bias, the multiple independent killers identified, and the political cover-up that shook public trust.

  • How soft soil, scavengers, and overgrowth made the corridor a forensic nightmare
  • The 23 First Nations communities affected and the legacy of residential schools and the 60s Scoop
  • Why the 2002 disappearance of Nicole Hoare finally drew national attention
  • The independent predators uncovered by Project E-Pana, including Cody Legebokoff
  • The 2015 triple delete scandal and the decades-long delay in transit and cellular fixes

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