Lethbridge Herald e-Edition

Police and family renew calls for info on missing Manitoba teen

On the nights Lena Harper can’t sleep, she stares out a window in her home on Wasagamack First Nation hoping to one day see her granddaughter walk up the driveway.

It’s become a ritual for Harper since Tammy Nattaway, who was 16 at the time, vanished a year ago.

“I would look out the window thinking ... maybe we would see her on the road waving at me saying, ‘I’m home,”’ Harper said in an interview.

Manitoba RCMP say the teen was last seen in her community of Garden Hill First Nation on July 14, 2020.

Wasagamack, Garden Hill and St. Theresa’s Point First Nations are neighbouring communities in the remote Island Lake region in northern Manitoba.

It’s not uncommon for residents to go back and forth between the three.

Harper says in recent years Tammy would often stay at her place where she enjoyed hanging out with family and spending time with kids in the area.

Police say the family contacted officers on July

31, 2020, to make an official missing persons report after searches in the three communities were unsuccessful.

Those closest to Tammy say she’s a quiet girl who likes listening to music or reading books on her phone. She is the second oldest in a family of nine siblings. Her mother says her daughter is timid.

“She wouldn’t run off. She would barely even walk to the convenience store by herself. We always knew where she was. We knew something else was going on,” Cecile Stephanie Nattaway said in an RCMP release earlier this month.

Officers have spoken to more than 100 people and searched land and water using helicopters, boats and sonar technology, but there have been no solid leads, said Tara Seel, Manitoba RCMP’s media relations officer.

With tips and police searches waning, Mounties decided to renew a request for information on the one-year anniversary of Tammy’s disappearance.

“If someone knows something, don’t assume that we know it. It could be that piece that we’re looking for,” Seel said in an interview.

“There’s a lot of rumours going around, which we look into of course, but it sure helps when someone calls us directly and tells us what they know.”

Police suspect “foul play” in the teen’s disappearance, but Seel said officers haven’t ruled it a homicide.

Officers have relied on locals to help search the vast area. The communities are surrounded by water and wooded areas, which makes them only accessible by air in the summer and ice road in the winter.

Seel said having community support is important to the investigation. “To have the local knowledge contribute to our grid searching and our methodologies is beyond valuable.”

Jack Harper is one of the lead co-ordinators who has organized community-led searches. Most recently, an underwater drone was used to search waterways near Wasagamack.

He said Tammy’s disappearance, and the lack of answers, weighs on searchers.

“They sometimes get frustrated. Sometimes I can see some people in those searches can’t really concentrate on their home. They’re too busy thinking about her,” he said.

Harper understands the frustration. He feels it some days, too, but said he won’t rest until Tammy is found.

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2021-07-27T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-27T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://lethbridgeherald.pressreader.com/article/281526524087530

Alberta Newspaper Group