On May 10th just after 10 in the morning, Shellbrook RCMP received a complaint of a burning vehicle on the Ahtahkakoop First Nation.
A member from the detachment located the burning vehicle at which time some of the surrounding bushes were on fire.
At that point the interior of the car was not searched.
Later that day around 5 p.m. the RCMP received two calls of a missing person who was last seen the previous night around 11 p.m.
Then at 5:30 p.m. Shellbrooke RCMP received information that a burnt vehicle on the Ahtahkakoop First Nation may contain human remains.
Once the RCMP arrived they discovered human remains in the vehicle.
The investigation is continuing to discover if the human remains and the reported missing person are related.
Human Remains Found in Burnt Vehicle on Ahtahkakoop First Nation
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The Candian government wants the country’s banks to identify, in customers’ bank statements when they receive the carbon rebate, that it is labelled as such.
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault says the lack of a clear identifier is contributing to confusion about carbon price rebates, so he is going to change the law if he has to in order to force the big banks to identify the carbon rebate by name when doing direct deposits.
The first rebate deposits in 2022 were labelled very generically, which meant recipients had no idea why they were getting the money.
T-D and B-MO have adopted the government’s requested “CdaCarbonRebate” entry, R-B-C and Scotiabank say they couldn’t make the change in time for the rollout, and C-I-B-C is still calling it “Deposit Canada.”