Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Wallet stolen on camping trip in 1979 returned to woman in Kamloops, B.C.

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 17 Nov, 2014 11:26 AM
  • Wallet stolen on camping trip in 1979 returned to woman in Kamloops, B.C.
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — When Martha Shepherd answered the phone, the last thing she expected to hear was that someone found her wallet — 35 years after her purse was stolen.
 
The caller identified himself as a Vancouver Island police officer, and Shepherd assumed the worst.
 
“You automatically think it’s bad news,” said the Kamloops, B.C., resident.
 
The officer was a sergeant from the RCMP detachment in Ucluelet — a place Shepherd last visited in 1979, when it was known as Long Beach.
 
The Mountie asked Shepherd if she’d lost a purse.
 
“I said yes and he asked when,” she said.
 
“I said, ‘I can’t remember, but it was at Long Beach.' “He said they were drying it out and they’d be sending a parcel.”
 
A highways worker cleaning a ditch found the wallet.
 
Shepherd was on a camping trip on Long Beach in 1979 when someone broke into her car and stole her purse. Her wallet contained about $100 in cash.
 
“I asked him, ‘I don’t suppose there was $100 in there?’” she said.
 
There wasn’t. But the community pitched in and sent Shepherd $100 in a package along with all her old identification.
 
They included souvenirs such as a blanket from the Ucluelet First Nation, bumper stickers, home-canned salmon, magnets and cards signed by residents.
 
Shepherd said she hasn’t been back to Ucluelet since her purse was stolen and had no intention of ever returning.
 
“But now I want to go,” she said. “I’d like to in the summertime.” (Kamloops This Week)

MORE National ARTICLES

Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger

Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger
VANCOUVER — The Conservative government's new anti-prostitution law will continue to endanger the lives of people who work in the sex trade and in some cases make things worse, sex workers and advocates said Thursday as the law received royal assent.

Sex Workers Say New Anti-prostitution Law Still Puts Them In Danger

B.C. Man To Serve Five Years In Prison For Luring Underage Girls Online

B.C. Man To Serve Five Years In Prison For Luring Underage Girls Online
VERNON, B.C. — A British Columbia man has been sentenced to almost five years in prison for luring underage girls online.

B.C. Man To Serve Five Years In Prison For Luring Underage Girls Online

Surrey High School Stabbing: Assault Charges Recommended Against Teen Suspect

Surrey High School Stabbing: Assault Charges Recommended Against Teen Suspect
SURREY, B.C. — Assault charges are being recommended against a 17-year-old boy who was arrested in connection to a Vancouver-area school stabbing.

Surrey High School Stabbing: Assault Charges Recommended Against Teen Suspect

B.C. Landowners Group Launches Second Legal Challenge Of Site C Dam Approval

B.C. Landowners Group Launches Second Legal Challenge Of Site C Dam Approval
VANCOUVER — A group of B.C. landowners has taken legal action to quash the federal government's approval of the multibillion-dollar Site C dam.

B.C. Landowners Group Launches Second Legal Challenge Of Site C Dam Approval

No Charges Against Two B.C. Officers Who Used Force During Separate Arrests

No Charges Against Two B.C. Officers Who Used Force During Separate Arrests
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's criminal justice branch says no charges will be laid against two police officers involving separate allegations of use of force.

No Charges Against Two B.C. Officers Who Used Force During Separate Arrests

Surrey Board of Trade announces 2014 Surrey Business Award Winners

Surrey Board of Trade announces 2014 Surrey Business Award Winners
Surrey, BC – On Thursday, November 7, 2014, the Surrey Board of Trade recognized six of Surrey’s best businesses in a variety of different categories. 

Surrey Board of Trade announces 2014 Surrey Business Award Winners