Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Police Believe Burned Bodies Are Members Of Murdered Chilliwack Family

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2015 12:59 PM
    SURREY, B.C. — Homicide investigators who pulled three "badly burned" bodies from a charred home east of Vancouver say they believe the people were family members linked with a horrifying Facebook confession.
     
    Detectives also discovered a fourth body in another home, matching the social media post apparently written by Randy Janzen last Thursday.
     
    "We believe them to be the family — the three members of the Janzen family — as stated in the Facebook posting by Randy Janzen," said Sgt. Stephanie Ashton of the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team on Monday.
     
    Janzen's post says he shot his daughter Emily to relieve her of excruciating migraines, and then turned the gun on his wife Laurel and sister Shelly.
     
    The post says: "Over the last 10 days I have done some of the worst things I could have ever imagined a person doing."
     
    Ashton said detectives are waiting for the B.C. Coroner's Service to confirm identities. Coroner Barb McLintock couldn't say how long the analysis will take.
     
    Ashton asked members of the public to help officers as they build a timeline of the deaths.
     
    "Any kind of contact — even a small Facebook posting or social message — we're interested in hearing from people that communicated with anyone from the Janzen family from about mid-April to May 7."
     
    Police were first alerted to a potential triple homicide by information received from social media last Thursday afternoon.
     
    Officers were dispatched to a home in Langley, B.C., where they found the first body. A long-time friend has said the home belonged to Shelly Janzen.
     
    They were then led to a second location in the Rosedale Popkum neighbourhood of Chilliwack, east of Vancouver.
     
    A four-hour standoff ensued with a man, before the home caught fire and was quickly engulfed in flames.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    More Residents Set To Leave Northern Ontario Community Threatened By Flood

    More Residents Set To Leave Northern Ontario Community Threatened By Flood
    Chief Derek Stephen says 600 vulnerable residents of Kashechewan on the western shore of James Bay are the first to be evacuated.

    More Residents Set To Leave Northern Ontario Community Threatened By Flood

    Airpark Owner Says He Warned Pilot About Engine Before Highway 91 Landing

    Airpark Owner Says He Warned Pilot About Engine Before Highway 91 Landing
    Arnold Klappe of King George Airpark says he and his mechanic told Paul Deane-Freeman about the condition of his plane's engine on several occasions, and even priced out the parts needed to fix it.

    Airpark Owner Says He Warned Pilot About Engine Before Highway 91 Landing

    6.1 Magnitude Earthquake Hits British Columbia's North Coast, No Tsunami

    6.1 Magnitude Earthquake Hits British Columbia's North Coast, No Tsunami
    The 6.1 magnitude earthquake struck the Haida Gwaii region approximately 167 km southeast of the Village of Queen Charlotte at about 7 a.m. Friday.

    6.1 Magnitude Earthquake Hits British Columbia's North Coast, No Tsunami

    High Court OKs Extradition Of Two To Face Cold Case Murder Charges

    High Court OKs Extradition Of Two To Face Cold Case Murder Charges
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has cleared the way for two men to be extradited to New Hampshire to face trial in a decades-old double murder.

    High Court OKs Extradition Of Two To Face Cold Case Murder Charges

    Battle Over DND Budget As Liberals Claim Spending On Track To Historical Low

    OTTAWA — Numbers compiled by the federal Liberals suggest spending on the Canadian military will hit a historic low in the coming decade, despite a planned Conservative injection of $11.8 billion starting in 2017.

    Battle Over DND Budget As Liberals Claim Spending On Track To Historical Low

    Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding

    Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding
    KASHECHEWAN, Ont. — The evacuation of a remote northern Ontario First Nation has begun as the rapidly rising Albany River threatens the community.

    Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding