CANADA Canada - Ronald, 26, & Doreen Jack, 26, & 2 boys, Prince George, BC, 1 Aug 1989

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http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/1480dfbc.html
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Doreen Jack

Missing since August 1, 1989 from Prince George, British Columbia, Canada.
Classification: Missing



Circumstances of Disappearance
On August 1, 1989, Ronald Jack was seen at the First Litre Pub with a white male, they left together.
A relative later told police the man offered Jack and his wife, Doreen, jobs either at a logging camp or at a ranch.

On August 2, 1989, at the Bednesti Cluculz Lake area, Ronald phoned his mother. He said the family would be gone for 10 days to 2 weeks. They were packing up some of their belongings and those of their two boys, Russell and Ryan. It appeared the family had intention of returning to their home on Strathcona Avenue at some point.
The family has not been seen or heard from since. Foul play is possible.

Ronald Jack
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http://www.merrittherald.com/tips-thaw-cold-case/
October 3, 2006
Nearly 13 years after the Jack family disappeared, Vanderhoof RCMP received a phone call from an unidentified man. The call was patched through to the Prince George police.
“The Jack family are buried at the south end of Gordie’s ranch,” the man told police.
Police tracked the call to the Stoney Creek area, west of Fraser Lake.

There had been a party at the residence where the call was made, and police had been called to a noise complaint at the home.
Interviews of the partygoers revealed nothing to further the investigation into the missing family.
 
http://www.pgfreepress.com/missing-since-‘89/
Eyewitnesses say Jack left the pub with a tall, hefty Caucasian man approximately 35 to 40 years old.
Witnesses described the man as having brownish-red hair, short beard and moustache, and wearing faded blue jeans, a red-checkered work shirt, blue nylon jacket and work boots with leather fringes over the toes.
Ronald Paul Jack was 26 at the time of his disappearance, 5’6″ tall and 150 lbs. Doreen Ann Jack, also 26, was 5’2″ tall and 111 lbs.
Russell Jack was nine years old, 4′ tall and 90 lbs. Ryan Jack was four years old, 3′ tall and 55 lbs.
All had black hair, brown eyes and were aboriginal descent
.
rbbm.
 
Who do I talk to about who set this page up? Would like to know more. Worried
 
Who do I talk to about who set this page up? Would like to know more. Worried
Welcome to WsJoc!

Which page are you referring to and if i may ask, why are you worried?
 
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/new...inquiry-heads-to-nova-scotia/article36760471/
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October 29, 2017
Marlene Jack holds photos of her missing sister Doreen Jack, Doreen's husband, Ronald, and the couple's two sons Ryan and Russell who went missing from Prince George in 1989, while testifying during hearings at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Smithers, B.C., on Wednesday Sept. 27, 2017.
http://cfnrfm.ca/mmiw-story-marlene-doreen-jack/
MIW: The story of Marlene and Doreen Jack

Posted by: Ashley Anthony September 27, 2017
RCMP received an anonymous tip in 2012 that the bodies of the family were located on a farm by Stony Creek. Puis says RCMP investigated around the barn, but from what he has heard, the bodies were located along the fenceline. His one request is that the RCMP go back and look again for the bodies of his lost loved ones.
 

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This case seems solvable with a conviction. I just found out about it via FB. I am so sorry to the family. How horrible! Kind of seems the man has the same mentality of Kohlhepp among others: getting the family to come out under the guise of a job.
 
B.C. sister hoping Facebook page will help bring information, and closure to cold case

Doreen Jack would be 55 this year – a milestone her sister Marlene would have loved to celebrate with cake, song and feast.

The sweet, grinning nephews she remembers as young boys would be grown men, maybe with young families of their own by now.

But on Aug. 2, 1989, Ronnie Jack, 26, his wife Doreen, 26, and their sons Russell, 9, and Ryan, 4, vanished without a trace in Prince George, B.C. leaving their loved ones and police stymied by dead-end leads over the past three decades.

“The cops told me because the case is so old, there are 60 boxes they have to go through with each tip they receive,” said Marlene Jack, who started the Missing Jack Family Out of Prince George Facebook group in hopes of keeping the cold-case current and with any luck, drum-up new information.
 
Police Look To Crack Jack Family Cold Case

Police are hoping to make contact with an anonymous individual who provided them with information through a third party previously. They say the individual contacted the third party by phone and then by regular mail.

“We would like to speak to this individual in order to gain greater clarity and insight into the information that was provided,” says Staff Sergeant Kent MacNeill, in charge of the Prince George RCMP’s Serious Crime Section. “Every bit of information we receive has the potential to further this investigation.”
 
Prince George RCMP - Investigators wish to Speak with Anonymous Person about Missing Jack Family

Prince George, General Investigation Services

2018-08-03 05:07 PDT

File # 1989-28607

This week marks the 29 year anniversary of the disappearance of the Jack Family from Prince George, BC.

Ronald (Ronnie), wife Doreen and children Russell (9 years) and Ryan (4 years), were last heard from during the early morning of August 2nd, 1989 when Ronnie called his mother in the Burns Lake area. It is believed that shortly after that phone call, the family departed their home on Strathcona Avenue in Prince George and have never been seen since. More details of the disappearance can be found on the Canada’s Missing website.

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A collage of images of the members of the Jack family, Ronald, Doreen, Russell and Ryan.
Serious Crime investigators with the Prince George RCMP are seeking to speak to an individual that reached out during this investigation. This anonymous person provided information to a third party by telephone and then regular mail. The third party then provided that information to police. Investigators are requesting this person contact them directly.

We would like to speak to this individual in order to gain greater clarity and insight into the information that was provided says Staff Sergeant Kent MacNeill, in charge of the Prince George RCMP’s Serious Crime Section. Every bit of information we receive has the potential to further this investigation.

S/Sgt. Kent MacNeill can be reached at 250-561-3300.

The investigation has been thorough and exhaustive over the past three decades. The Prince George RCMP know there are individuals that have information about this disappearance that have never come forward. We would like to take this opportunity to reach out to those persons and ask that they come forward to speak with investigators.

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Image of some of the boxes storing the thousands of documents accumulated during the investigation.
The disappearance of the Jack family has greatly impacted many for nearly three decades, but none more than their family and friends says Cpl. Craig Douglass, spokesperson for the Prince George RCMP. Having information about what may have happened to the Jack family must weight heavy on anyone with it. Please come forward and help provide some much needed answers to this mystery.

If you have any information about Ronald, Doreen, Russell and Ryan Jack or what happened to them, please contact the Prince George RCMP at (250)561-3300 or anonymously contact Crime Stoppers at 1(800)222-8477 or online at www.pgcrimestoppers.bc.ca (English only). You do not have to reveal your identity to Crime Stoppers. If you provide information that leads to an arrest, you could be eligible for a cash reward.

Released by

Cpl. Craig Douglass

Communications NCO / Media Liaison Officer
Prince George RCMP
princegeorge.rcmp.ca
455 Victoria Street, Prince George, BC, V2L 0B7
Office: 250-561-3321
Cell: 250-640-1758
Email: pg_media@rcmp-grc.gc.ca

Follow Us:

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Hoping this search leads to some answers for the family!
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RCMP say they believe someone out there has information that could help solve the disappearance of the Jack family. (Prince George RCMP)

Marlene Jack, one of Doreen's younger sisters, has been unrelenting in her pursuit of answers about the family's disappearance and long anticipated Wednesday's search.

"I'm so nervous," said Marlene, standing on the side of Highway 16, which is often referred to as the Highway of Tears, as she waited for the RCMP to pick her up and take her to the site.

"I hope we find something today. I really do."

She's trying to remain positive that it will bring to light new evidence."
 

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