Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Missing Indigenous Sex-Trade Worker Found Dead In Surrey, B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Sep, 2016 12:37 PM
  • Missing Indigenous Sex-Trade Worker Found Dead In Surrey, B.C.
A family friend of a Saskatchewan woman found dead in a forested area of British Columbia hopes a national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women will look into why police publicize some missing person cases but not others.
 
Dana Morenstein says Deanna Desjarlais of Saskatoon, who was a sex-trade worker with addiction problems, was twice reported missing earlier this year to police in Vancouver.
 
Last week, an officer called to tell her family that remains found May 17 in woods near Surrey, B.C., were recently matched to the 27-year-old, said Morenstein.
 
The body was badly decomposed and had been scavenged by animals. Morenstein said police informed the family that a cause of death hasn't been determined, but it's considered suspicious.
 
She's now questioning what police did before the remains were identified — and why they never released a missing person bulletin with a photo of Desjarlais to the public.
 
"No one even knew she was missing," said Morenstein, a teacher at the Kahkewistahaw First Nation, a reserve east of Regina.
 
She said when police didn't take public action, she started a Facebook page to get the word out about Desjarlais and sent flyers to Vancouver agencies to distribute.
 
"We were getting no help from police," said Morenstein, who added the national inquiry needs to look at missing persons being publicly identified.
 
"I think that there are too many missing women's cases that are dismissed."
 
 
Vancouver police said they seriously investigated Desjarlais as a missing person, even though they didn't issue a media release. She was first reported missing May 1.
 
"The information we had was that she was alive and well and potentially not wanting to be located," said acting Sgt. Brian Montague.
 
He said the family was notified and the file was closed. It was reopened when Desjarlais was reported missing again in June.
 
"I guarantee the investigation was handled properly," Montague said.
 
Officers look at various criteria when determining whether to put out a news release on a missing person, he said, and it has nothing to do with a person's race or lifestyle.
 
Vancouver police get about 5,000 missing person reports every year, and putting out a dozen releases each day would become "white noise," Montague added.
 
Surrey RCMP are investigating the death of Desjarlais. On Tuesday, they issued a release asking for the public's help in the case.
 
The release noted the serious crime unit was working with police agencies around the province, while the coroner's office and RCMP forensic investigators were looking into the cause of death.
 
"The Surrey RCMP is asking anyone who may have seen Ms. Desjarlais in the weeks leading up to May 17th to call us," says Cpl. Scotty Schumann. "If we can determine her movements during this time, it may assist us in determining what ultimately led to her unfortunate death."
 
A funeral home had arranged to transport the remains back to Saskatchewan late Tuesday, said Morenstein, adding Desjarlais will be buried near her mother on the Kawacatoose First Nation.
 
An aboriginal liaison officer with the RCMP has organized a traditional ceremony to be performed at the site where the body was found to help transition to the spirit world.
 
 
Angela Marie MacDougall, director of Battered Women's Support Services in Vancouver, has been working with the Desjarlais family. She said why some missing women don't warrant a public news release needs to be examined.
 
She said police did send a notification requesting assistance to locate Desjarlais through the B.C. Missing Women's Network, but it didn't reach MacDougall's agency until Sept. 1.

MORE National ARTICLES

UBC Warns Students After Man Attempts To Break Into Woman's Residence Lounge

UBC Warns Students After Man Attempts To Break Into Woman's Residence Lounge
The incident happened Friday at 2 a.m. outside the Marine Drive Building 5 lounge, where a male was seen pressing himself against the exterior window.

UBC Warns Students After Man Attempts To Break Into Woman's Residence Lounge

Newfoundland Woman In Hospital After Car Plunges Over Signal Hill Cliff

Newfoundland Woman In Hospital After Car Plunges Over Signal Hill Cliff
Fire officials in Newfoundland say a woman is in hospital after she drove her car over a rocky cliff on the shores of St. John's, NL.

Newfoundland Woman In Hospital After Car Plunges Over Signal Hill Cliff

Sudden Influx Of Refugees Strains Halifax School, Sparks Call For Federal Funds

Sudden Influx Of Refugees Strains Halifax School, Sparks Call For Federal Funds
Ahmad, 10, and Mohamad Al Marrach, 9, are among 41 Syrian children who arrived at Joseph Howe Elementary School in February, suddenly expanding the small, inner-city school's population by a third from its existing 146 students.

Sudden Influx Of Refugees Strains Halifax School, Sparks Call For Federal Funds

Small Towns Struggling With Policing Costs, Forcing Tax Hikes

Small Towns Struggling With Policing Costs, Forcing Tax Hikes
Smaller communities across the country have been grappling with what they view as an ever-increasing tax bite for policing they can barely afford.

Small Towns Struggling With Policing Costs, Forcing Tax Hikes

'It'll Take Forever:' Gay Hutterite On Possibility Of Being Accepted

'It'll Take Forever:' Gay Hutterite On Possibility Of Being Accepted
The 23-year-old photographer's story has been recorded in a short documentary film "Queer Hutterite" which is available on Telus Optik TV on Demand and Telus Optik Local online.

'It'll Take Forever:' Gay Hutterite On Possibility Of Being Accepted

Justin Trudeau Promotes Wide-open Liberal Party, No More Membership Privileges

Justin Trudeau Promotes Wide-open Liberal Party, No More Membership Privileges
Justin Trudeau is pushing a proposed new constitution for the Liberal Party of Canada aimed at transforming the federal party from an exclusive club into a wide-open political movement.

Justin Trudeau Promotes Wide-open Liberal Party, No More Membership Privileges