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WHAT’S INSIDE
WHO WON THE COMMUTER CHALLENGE? A3
Weather A2 Hunt for History A5 What’s On N.Islander Letters A6 Classifieds A12 Sports A10
TUESDAY May 27, 2014 Volume 20, No. 42 Courtenay, B.C. Price: 57 cents plus GST
www.comoxvalleyecho.com
HORNBY ISLAND’S HISTORIC SEA BREEZE LODGE BURNS TO THE GROUND ... A8
Salvation Army marks 50 years of faith and service in the Valley By Philip Round Echo Staff The Salvation Army is about to celebrate its 50th anniversary of faith and service in the Comox Valley. It will do so at a series of weekend events that will include music provided by one of the great Salvation Army staples - a brass band. The Gospel Brass Band from Chilliwack will be traveling across to the Island and accompanying them will be the Salvation Army’s very first Pastor in the Comox Valley, Major Avril Halsey. The celebrations kick off on Friday, May 30, when there will be cakes and hot dogs for all at the Salvation Army’s three local Thrift Stores - Comox Avenue in downtown Comox, and both Fourth Street and Kilpatrick Avenue in Courtenay. There will also be plenty of bargains for shoppers, as for one day only everything on sale at all three stores will be half the marked price. On Saturday, May 31 there will be a community fun day at Simms Park in Courtenay from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. where attractions will include a bouncy castle, bungee runs, a barbecue and lots of entertainment, including the brass band performance. Everyone is welcome to what will be a completely free event. On the Saturday evening there will be an anniversary banquet at the Best Western Westerly Hotel, to which all past core officers and pastors of the Salvation Army in the Valley have been invited. The dinner is open to all, with remaining tickets on sale at $25 apiece. And on Sunday, June 1 there will be a 50th anniversary service with prayers of appreciation, lively music and uplifting words at its community church on Fitzgerald Avenue. It was in 1963 that the Salvation Army in Nanaimo decided to establish an outpost in the Comox Valley, and in June 1964 the first religious service was held and the first steps taken towards providing ministry to the wider community. By May the following year they had a permanent place to worship - a Methodist Church on McPhee Avenue - before eventually settling at the present church building on Fitzgerald. (Continued on page 9)
Jamie Sproule ... missing since Thursday
Search for Jamie Sproule suspended Extensive search of Cumberland area fails to find any clues Cathy Byers (left) and store manager Sandra Friesen (right) putting more fashions on display at the Salvation Army’s Kilpatrick Avenue Thrift Store.
The Salvation Army’s Comox Valley Pastor, Lieutenant Darryl Burry, pictured at the community church on Fitzgerald Avenue.
By Michael Briones Echo Staff After three days of extensive searching, no clues have been uncovered to indicate where Jamie Sproule is. Around 150 people, including local residents, friends, families, the police and search and rescue groups from Nanaimo, Port Alberni, Arrowsmith, Campbell River and the Comox Valley Ground Search and Rescue spent hours and hours scouring the vicinity where Sproule was last seen. But they were unable to find any signs, tracks or leads that could direct them to where the missing Cumberland man could be. “There’s just no clues in the immediate area,� said Mike Bryan, manager of the CVGSAR. “We were able to utilize all the volunteers from the community without SAR training to extensively cover the area very quickly especially within about the two kilometer area of the house.� A grid search, which is a methodical approach where people walk shoulder to shoulder or arm’s-length apart, was conducted to comb the area to make sure nothing is missed. (Continued on page 2)
Volunteer Leanne Spragge of Royston prepares another tray of cookies for those staying overnight at the Pidcock Avenue emergency shelter as the Salvation Army’s Community Ministries Director, Brent Hobden, takes a quick sample of the tasty dough.
Californian man gets 7.5 years for online sex crime with Valley 14-year-old Man posed as teen to convince girl into performing sexual acts on webcam By Drew A. Penner Echo Staff A 25-year-old Californian man who posed as a teenager to convince a 14-year-old girl in Courtenay to set up her webcam and perform sexual acts for him has been sent to a US prison for 92 months. Pretending to be a 15-year-old boy, Jesse Yang met the victim through anonymous chat site omegle.com, before instructing the girl to start a Skype video chat in Nov. 2011. “She’s underage and he’s telling her what to do,� said Const. Ray Lynn Downey, of the
Comox Valley RCMP detachment, who just happened to be working when the victim’s father called police after walking in on his daughter partially clothed. “He’s basically creating child porn.� The man identified himself simply as “J� online, but investigators were able to track him down because the girl hadn’t yet closed the Skype window. He had also provided his email details to the girl and his IP address was used to trace his physical location. Yang pled guilty to possession of child pornography in January, leading to the conviction, which police say is all too rare.
“We get about a file or two a month,� Downey said. “That’s what’s reported to us. So imagine how much is actually happening.� Comox Valley RCMP worked with the Integrated Child Exploitation Team (ICE) and San Francisco Homeland Security in order to bring Yang to justice. “We’ll have people that come in here and say, ‘Someone’s done this’ or ‘This has happened,’ but how often is it that we get it live with the evidence right there?� she said, adding the ability to prosecute some in another country for cybercrime makes the case even more rare. “A lot of the chats don’t record. By grabbing her and grabbing the laptop live
and bringing them in here, the chat was still on the computer, which made all the difference.� Children in the modern world are increasingly exposed to explicit depictions of adult sexual behaviour through the internet and other media, although these images don’t always come hand in hand with the ability to ask questions about what they are seeing or the values surrounding human sexual behaviour. Researchers say when children fail to develop the adult attachments they need, sexual behaviour with other children may offer an opportunity for intimacy. (Continued on page 2)
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