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The Missing Jack Family from Prince George

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Ronnie Jack, 26, Doreen Jack, 26, Russell 9 and Ryan 4 were last seen on August 2, 1989 in Prince George. They told their family they had jobs at a logging camp and they’d be gone for about 10 days. And then they vanished. 

This story is from my new book Cold Case BC: The stories behind the Province’s most sensational murders and missing persons cases

On August 1, 1989, Ronnie Jack, 26, was at the First Litre Pub, a sketchy Prince George drinking hole about four blocks from his home. While there he got to talking to a man in his late thirties who offered Ronnie and his wife Doreen temporary jobs at a logging camp. Since they didn’t own a car, they’d leave with the man that night.

The Jack family

Job at a logging camp:

Ronnie called his mother Mabel and told her that they would be working in the Cluculz Lake area. He would be bucking logs and Doreen would work as a cook’s helper in the camp kitchen. The kids would go with them. Ronnie said they would be gone about ten days, back well before Russell started school that September.

Jack family suspect

As weeks went by with no word from the family, Mabel Jack reported the family missing to the RCMP. The time factor was a major obstacle. Witness reports are notoriously unreliable, and after this much time, it would be even harder to nail down a timeline or to find a reliable description of the suspect and his vehicle.

Theories:

Several theories have circulated over the years. At first police believed the family was likely  involved in an accident, the vehicle hidden in dense bush off the side of a road. But the area was thoroughly searched, and the unidentified driver—the man who offered them the job—would also likely have been reported missing by his family or his employer, but no reports ever came in. A second theory was that the job offer was real, but it wasn’t legal; something went wrong, and the family was killed. Another darker theory was that the kids were the target all along; the parents were quickly and quietly subdued and killed, and the kids taken by sex traffickers.

Jack family

Doreen’s sister searched for the Jacks in Vancouver, and Mabel searched for them in the Prince George area. When her sister first went missing, Marlene says that the RCMP told her that if she went to the media, they would not talk to her about their investigation. She believed them, and for a long time she stayed silent. But tired of being stonewalled, Marlene was determined to get some answers. Over the years she has hassled police, taken her story to the media, and started a Facebook group called Missing Jack Family out of Prince George, which at the present time has 3,500 followers.

If you have any information about the Jack family’s disappearance, please contact the Prince George RCMP at 250-561-3300. Or remain anonymous and call Crime Stoppers at 1(800) 222-8477.

Show Notes:
Sponsors: Forbidden Vancouver Walking Tours, Arsenal Pulp Press and Erin Hakin Jewellery

Music:   Andreas Schuld ‘Waiting for You’
Intro: Mark Dunn
Interviews: Marlene Jack, Marg Skin, Sgt. Aaron Whitehouse, Prince George RCMP
Buy me a coffee promo: McBride Communications and Media
Promo: Dark Poutine

Sources:
Cold Case BC: The stories behind the province’s most sensational murder and missing person cases
• National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Truth-Gathering Process: Part 1 statement gathering (Smithers: International Reporting Inc., 2017)

 

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5 comments on “The Missing Jack Family from Prince George”

did u look beyong pg like diese lk goodhope lk terrace bc r watson lk yukon,, there is many places to go an hide bodys,, and why would they take their children to a camp like that , something dont sound right an i think the dad knew this,,

In another account I read it said that there was also to be some sort of childcare for the children. They disappeared a few blocks from where I live. Obviously were told whatever it took to lure them and their children away that night.

My parents raised their kids in a logging camp for 4 years in Hinton it’s not unheard of, many camps had good clean living quarters. Also, many family members attended these logging camps together, brothers, dads, uncles and cousins so it’s not a surprise.
Have you spoken to native elders to locate them spiritually ?
I believe that lady was the target and they were lured with promise of good pay in order to get them out to camp.

I have been looking into this case for quite sometime as well as other cases in BC. I have come across many similar sketches.
I cannot post them here.

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