Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Search For Missing Snowshoers On Vancouver's North Shore Called Off After 5 Days

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jan, 2017 06:20 PM
    VANCOUVER — Police say search crews have run out of places where they can safely look for two men missing since Christmas Day in the back country of Vancouver's North Shore Mountains.
     
    West Vancouver police said Friday that the search for 43-year-old Roy Lee and 64-year-old Chun Lam had been stood down and would not resume unless they received new information.
     
    Officials said a decision had been made between police and North Shore Rescue late Friday to turn the search from a rescue to a recovery operation, meaning the two men are presumed to be dead.  
     
    Const. Jeff Palmer said calling off the search isn't something that is taken lightly..
     
    "Unfortunately, there's just no reason to believe that further searching, with all the risks for search and rescue volunteers, will produce a different result," he said.
     
    A missing person's file on the men will remain open, but there is no information to suggest they are anywhere but on the mountain, Palmer said.
     
    Lee and Lum set out from Cypress Mountain Resort in West Vancouver for a day of snowshoeing on Dec. 25. A rescue mission began that night when Lee's car was found empty in the resort's parking lot.
     
    Efforts were hampered by heavy snow, strong winds and the threat of avalanche that forced the temporary suspension of the search on Wednesday.
     
    Conditions improved Friday morning and about 20 highly trained searchers supported by two helicopters returned to comb the Mount Strachan area, hoping to find a trace of the pair.
     
    Air and ground crews were able to extensively search a number of places that weather prevented them from checking in recent days, Palmer said.
     
    There was no sign of the men, he said, and continuing to comb the area would be unsafe for rescuers.
     
    "It is very difficult terrain in there. There's a number of areas that really, simply aren't very safe at any time of the year to search on foot," Palmer said.
     
    North Shore Rescue spokesman Mike Danks said the outcome of the mission is difficult.
     
    "It's really frustrating because so much effort has been put in," he said, noting that the situation could potentially have been avoided if the men had left a trip plan.
     
    "Hopefully, in future, people will see that you absolutely need to be prepared and you have to let someone know where you're going," Danks said.
     
     
    Palmer acknowledged that the news is extraordinarily difficult for the families involved.
     
    "We really want to be able to bring better news to the families and failing being able to bring them better news, we would hope we could at least bring them closure in a matter like this. And we simply aren't able to do that right now," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Abbotsford Police Chief Sends Letter To Parents About Gang Conflict

    Abbotsford Police Chief Sends Letter To Parents About Gang Conflict
    Abbotsford's police chief has sent a letter asking for help from the parents of young men whom officers believe are involved in a violent gang conflict.

    Abbotsford Police Chief Sends Letter To Parents About Gang Conflict

    Changes To Census Would Be Extremely Difficult Under New Law, Navdeep Bains Says

    Changes To Census Would Be Extremely Difficult Under New Law, Navdeep Bains Says
    Bains said the bill would give Statistics Canada a say over how data is collected.

    Changes To Census Would Be Extremely Difficult Under New Law, Navdeep Bains Says

    Winnipeg Lab Researcher Potentially Exposed To Ebola Virus Cleared After Isolation

    Winnipeg Lab Researcher Potentially Exposed To Ebola Virus Cleared After Isolation
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg lab researcher who was potentially exposed to the Ebola virus has been cleared to return to work.

    Winnipeg Lab Researcher Potentially Exposed To Ebola Virus Cleared After Isolation

    Canada Asks U.S. Court To Toss Case Alleging It Wrongly Named Woman A Terrorist

    Canada Asks U.S. Court To Toss Case Alleging It Wrongly Named Woman A Terrorist
    The Canadian government wants a United States court to throw out a lawsuit that accuses it of ruining the life and multimillion-dollar business of a British Columbia woman after it wrongly branded her a terrorist.

    Canada Asks U.S. Court To Toss Case Alleging It Wrongly Named Woman A Terrorist

    B.C. Enacts Ministerial Order To Create Overdose Prevention Sites

    Terry Lake says the order gives provincial emergency health services and regional health authorities the ability to provide overdose prevention treatment as necessary on an emergency basis.

    B.C. Enacts Ministerial Order To Create Overdose Prevention Sites

    Delta Man, 53, Dead After Bar Fight In South Delta

    Delta Man, 53, Dead After Bar Fight In South Delta
    On December 11, 2016 at approximately 0130 hrs., Delta Police responded to a report of a fight at the rear of Rose and Crown Pub  in the 1200 blk 56th Street in South Delta.

    Delta Man, 53, Dead After Bar Fight In South Delta