Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Edmonton authorities issue Amber Alert for 3 boys abducted from home

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2014 02:23 PM

    EDMONTON — Authorities in Edmonton have issued an Amber Alert for three children.

    They say the boys — who are two, eight and nine — were abducted from a north Edmonton home at 9:45 a.m. on Friday.

    Police are looking for Leonard Hutchinson, 50, who is described as being Caucasian, standing about six-foot-one and weighing 300 pounds.

    He is bald and believed to be wearing a grey shirt, grey pants with suspenders and glasses.

    He and the children were last seen in a 2002 Red Kia Sedona license plate BPB 6141.

    It's believed the minivan is heading west from Edmonton and that Hutchinson may be with an aboriginal woman with long dark hair.

    The alert says two of the children have the same last name, and police haven't given the last name of the third.

    Jeremy, who is two, has curly blond hair and is three-feet-six-inches tall.

    Eight-year-old Andrew Hutchinson has short, dark, messy hair and stands four-foot-two, and nine-year-old Damien Hutchinson has light-brown short hair and is also four-feet-two inches tall.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Oil tanker adrift off coast of Nova Scotia after loss of steering

    Oil tanker adrift off coast of Nova Scotia after loss of steering
    HALIFAX — An oil tanker is adrift off the coast of Nova Scotia due to a loss of steering.

    Oil tanker adrift off coast of Nova Scotia after loss of steering

    Rape, Referendum, Climate Change Among Topics Of B.C. Non-fiction Finalists

    Rape, Referendum, Climate Change Among Topics Of B.C. Non-fiction Finalists
    VANCOUVER — A first-person account of a rape, a look at the 1995 referendum and a study of climate change are among the finalists for the B.C. National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction, worth a whopping $40,000.

    Rape, Referendum, Climate Change Among Topics Of B.C. Non-fiction Finalists

    Hungry polar bear cubs shot after entering Nunavut town

    Hungry polar bear cubs shot after entering Nunavut town
    TALOYOAK, Nunavut — Residents in a remote Arctic hamlet are baffled by the number of hungry polar bear cubs that have wandered into their community since the fall and have had to be shot.

    Hungry polar bear cubs shot after entering Nunavut town

    Vancouver Places 30,000 Sandbags Along Waterfront In Anticipation Of King Tide

    Vancouver Places 30,000 Sandbags Along Waterfront In Anticipation Of King Tide
    VANCOUVER — Some 30,000 sandbags line a stretch of low-lying waterfront land in Vancouver, placed by city workers in a bid to protect local homes from an anticipated king tide.

    Vancouver Places 30,000 Sandbags Along Waterfront In Anticipation Of King Tide

    Critics ask why Canada hasn't blocked international trade in 76 endangered species

    Critics ask why Canada hasn't blocked international trade in 76 endangered species
    Recently released documents indicate the federal government has reservations about restricting international trade in endangered species — more of them than almost any other government on Earth.

    Critics ask why Canada hasn't blocked international trade in 76 endangered species

    Premier Jim Prentice says low oil prices punch $6B-$7B hole in Alberta budget

    Premier Jim Prentice says low oil prices punch $6B-$7B hole in Alberta budget
    EDMONTON — Premier Jim Prentice says if oil prices continue to remain low, they will blow a $6 billion to $7 billion hole in the $40-billion provincial budget and no Albertan will be spared the pain.

    Premier Jim Prentice says low oil prices punch $6B-$7B hole in Alberta budget