Police in northern British Columbia have identified human remains found near Dawson Creek this month as those of Renee Didier, a woman who went missing nearly six months ago.
Over the past year, four individuals have vanished from the area.
The RCMP announced that the BC Coroners Service identified the remains discovered along the Kiskatinaw River on May 18 as belonging to Renee Didier.
The North District major crime unit is now investigating her death, alongside another case involving unidentified remains found in April on a rural road outside the city of Dawson Creek, which has a population of about 12,000.
According to a police statement, Renee Didier, also known by the last name Supernant, was a 40-year-old Indigenous woman.
Her disappearance was reported by friends and family after she was last seen on video at a gas station in the early morning of December 3, 2023.
Didier is among four people reported missing from the Dawson Creek area since March 2023. Another missing person is Darylyn Supernant, an Indigenous woman last seen on March 15, 2023.
Additionally, a 24-year-old man named Dave Daniel Domingo vanished in August following a possible shooting in the Rolla area near Dawson Creek.
Cole Hosack was last seen on New Year's Eve, leaving the Lonestar Nightlife bar in Dawson Creek. Hosack, who was not a local, was scheduled to move to Medicine Hat, Alberta, for a new job on January 5.
In April, the RCMP reported human remains found along 219 Road near Saskatoon Creek.
The BC Coroners Service and major crime investigators are working to identify these remains.
Authorities have not yet released the identity of all the remains found in April.
Dawson Creek, a community located about 400 kilometers northeast of Prince George, is now at the center of an intensive investigation into these disturbing disappearances.
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