Vanessa was four years old when her mother, Gloria Levina Moody, was murdered. Her brother, Dan, was three. Gloria, who everyone called Lee, was from the Bella Coola reserve of the Nuxalk Nation. She was the second oldest of eight children.
This podcast is based on a story in Cold Case Canada: The Stories Behind the Province’s Most Intriguing Murder and Missing Person Cases
On October 23, 1969, Lee, her brother Dave and her parents left for Williams Lake. The family checked into a room at the Ranch Hotel. The following day, Lee and Dave hit the local bars before ending up back at the Ranch Hotel, where Lee was last seen at 10:00 p.m. No one remembered what time she left or who she was with, and no one had seen her get into a car.

Lee’s body was found the next day on a cattle trail outside Williams Lake. She had been sexually assaulted and beaten to death.
Her parents, David and Daisy, took in Vanessa and Dan and raised them along with their own children. “My grandfather really blamed himself,” says Vanessa. “He locked himself in my mom’s room, and he just lay there. He didn’t eat or sleep, and when he came out, everybody in the whole town talked about how his hair went pure white.”
Vanessa says the first time the family heard from the RCMP was nearly three decades after her mother’s murder. Two RCMP officers brought along several boxes of files from the murder investigation and told the family that they believed three men from Williams Lake were responsible. All three were dead.

In 2007, the RCMP’s E-Pana unit added Lee’s case to their list of 18 murdered and missing women along Highways 16, 97 and 5.
Vanessa’s grandparents are gone, and sadly so is her brother Dan. “My kid brother would always introduce himself as, ‘Hi, my name is Dan, and I’m damaged goods,” Vanessa says. “Every one of our lives took a wrong turn after the murder. Even within the community, even today, people have a hard time talking about it.”
Show Notes:
Music: Andreas Schuld ‘Waiting for You’
Intro and voiceover: Mark Dunn
Source: Cold Case BC: The Stories Behind the Province’s Most Intriguing Murder and Missing Persons Cases
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Hi…I lived in Wms. Lk. at the time Gloria Moody was murdered. My mom worked at the Police Station as a guard for the females who were in jail for various reasons. I heard that Gloria was assaulted violently, sexually and physically and with a broken bottle pushed up inside of her. I have never forgotten about this heartbreaking, horrible crime. I did know a guy, who hung around with my eldest brother…they were alcoholics and junkies, who raped a young native girl and left her to die in the woods in the middle of winter. He was with a couple of friends; I don’t know the names of the friends. It came out in court that his friends told him they should go back and get her but he didn’t and she froze. He was arrested and charged with murder, but got off scott free b/c well, she was just an Indian. I don’t know who the other 2 men were…I hope my brother wasn’t involved, but I wouldn’t be surprised. My brother hung around with this guy and they were always at Sugar Cane; I know they were there to get drunk and rape girls…my brother was a pedophile….I wouldn’t be surprised if he was involved. Such a sad, sad story. Do you have any more details about how this young lady was taken…her brother said she was right behind me…leaving the Ranch Bar, and then she was gone. TY
If I remember right her body was found down by the railway tracks across from the Lakeview Hotel. I wished you would have said your brothers name, so I can remember them as I hung around the ranch and Lakeview in those days and went to dances at Sugar Cane and Deep Creek after the bar closed or a little bit before.
This is hearsay what I heard about a murdered girl (I thought her name was Rita and that she was from Williams Lake?) who was left naked to die somewhere off the highway between Williams Lake and Lac La Hache. She died of exposure after being assaulted by 3 men. The 3 men I was told were sons of well known and well off citizens in the town. I was told they did go to prison but only for a short while. I moved to Fraser Lake in north central BC in the 70s and once when we attended the bar in Endako, a favourite haunt for locals, one of the vinyl covered booths had been ripped quite badly. Thats when we heard the story about the 3 men from Williams Lake. They had recently been released from jail and were still nasty. They were the ones who had damaged the upholstery in the bar. Hearsay is often wrong but could there have been two separate murders in the same area and around the same time period?