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A FATHER’S AGONY – Alan Schmegelsky, father of Bryer Schmegelsky, poses for a photo during an interview with The Canadian Press in Mill Bay B.C. on Wednesday. RCMP have said that 19-year-old Kam McLeod and 18-year-old Bryer Schmegelsky are suspects in the shooting of Lucas Fowler of Sydney, Australia, his girlfriend Chynna Deese of Charlotte, N.C., and the death of Leonard Dyck of Vancouver. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Laura Kane

Father expects son will go out in ‘blaze of glory’ (Revised)

The father of a suspect in the deaths of three people in northern British Columbia says his son is in “very serious pain” – and he expects a nationwide manhunt will end in the young man’s death.

By CP on July 25, 2019

MILL BAY, B.C. – The father of a suspect in the deaths of three people in northern British Columbia says his son is in “very serious pain” – and he expects a nationwide manhunt will end in the young man’s death.

Alan Schmegelsky says his son, 18-year-old Bryer Schmegelsky – who had originally planned to go to Whitehorse – had a troubled upbringing.

He struggled through his parents’ acrimonious split in 2005 and his main influences became video games and YouTube.

“A normal child doesn’t travel across the country killing people. A child in some very serious pain does,” Schmegelsky said in an emotional interview Wednesday in Mill Bay, near his home in Victoria.

RCMP charged Schmegelsky and his longtime friend, 19-year-old Kam McLeod, with second-degree murder Wednesday in the death of Leonard Dyck, 64, of Vancouver.

His body was found on a highway pullout about two kilometres from a burned-out truck and camper police have said the teenagers had been driving.

Police had difficulty identifying Dyck and released a composite drawing.

They are also suspects in the deaths of Australian Lucas Fowler and his American girlfriend Chynna Deese, whose bodies were found along the side of a highway in northeastern B.C. on July 15.

Four days later, Dyck’s body was found near the teens’ burned-out truck several hundred kilometres from the first crime scene.

RCMP said that the murder charge means Canada-wide warrants have now been issued for McLeod and Schmegelsky.

A statement from the Dyck family said they are heartbroken by their loss.

“He was a loving husband and father. His death has created unthinkable grief, and we are struggling to understand what has happened.”

A statement from the University of British Columbia’s botany department said Dyck was a sessional lecturer.

“The UBC community is shocked and saddened by this news, and we offer our deepest condolences to Mr. Dyck’s family, friends and his colleagues at the university,” it read.

Police had initially treated the teens as missing, but announced they were suspects after they were spotted in northern Saskatchewan.

The manhunt stretched into northern Manitoba this week when a burned-out car the teens were travelling in was found near the community of Gillam.

Alan Schmegelsky said he expects his son will die in a confrontation with police.

“He’s on a suicide mission. He wants his pain to end,” he said, breaking down into tears.

“Basically, he’s going to be dead today (Wednesday) or tomorrow (Thursday). I know that. Rest in peace, Bryer. I love you. I’m so sorry all this had to happen.”

Even if his son is apprehended alive, his life will be over, the father said.

“He wants his hurt to end. They’re going to go out in a blaze of glory. Trust me on this. That’s what they’re going to do.”

Schmegelsky said he and his wife separated when their son was five.

She moved with the boy to the small Vancouver Island community of Port Alberni. There, he met McLeod in elementary school, and they quickly became inseparable best friends.

They were “everyday, good kids” who didn’t get into trouble, but his son had problems at home and, at 16, briefly moved to Victoria to live with him, Alan Schmegelsky said. The boy then returned to Port Alberni to live with his grandmother.

“He hasn’t been nurtured. He doesn’t have a driver’s licence. He never learned to ride a bike. He craved love and affection,” he said.

“His influences haven’t been good. His influences have been YouTube and video games.”

He loved strategy and battle video games in particular, Schmegelsky said. Two years ago, his son asked for an airsoft gun for Christmas.

Schmegelsky bought it for him and the teen and his friends would “battle” each other in the woods, he said.

Schmegelsky said his son doesn’t own any real guns and doesn’t know how to drive. He worked at the Port Alberni Walmart after graduating from high school this year, but was disappointed with the job. He told his dad he was heading to Alberta with McLeod to look for work.

The father recalled that his son bought a nice black suit with his second paycheque from Walmart.

“Now I realize it’s his funeral suit.”

Kam McLeod’s father, Keith McLeod, hung up when reached by telephone on Wednesday.

Facebook pages under the teens’ names are both connected to an account called “Illusive Gameing.” The page with Schmegelsky’s name has also previously posted a link to the vigilante group Anonymous.

In Port Alberni, signs with “No Trespassing” were staked outside of McLeod’s large waterfront family home. Keith McLeod released a written statement to media.

“This is what I do know – Kam is a kind, considerate, caring young man (who) always has been concerned about other people’s feelings,” said McLeod.

He added that they are trying to wrap their heads around what is happening and hope he can come home safely so they can get to the bottom of the story.

No one answered the door at Schmegelsky’s mother’s home nor at his grandmother’s house where he had been living.

Mae Lee, who lives several doors down from the grandmother, said he seemed like a nice boy.

“I would see him outside helping his grandmother,” she said.

In Gillam, the deputy mayor said residents have been locking their doors. John McDonald said residents are used to seeing strangers come and go from Manitoba Hydro projects. But they’re paying closer attention to faces since getting word Tuesday that the pair may be in the area.

Extra officers have been brought in for a search about 70 kilometres northwest of the town near Fox Lake Cree Nation, where Chief Walter Spence has said police would be patrolling.

Police set up a checkstop at an intersection on the only road leading into Gillam.

McDonald said if McLeod and Schmegelsky are there, they are in country known for its thick bush, swamps and pesky insects, and where it’s easy to get lost. It also rained Thursday.

“If they are wandering around in the bush, they couldn’t have picked a worse time because the sandflies came out three days ago and they’re just voracious,” he said.

“I’m quite sure they’ll be more than happy to have someone find them.”

By Laura Kane The Canadian Press

Comments (16)

Up 13 Down 3

IntoTheWild on Jul 31, 2019 at 8:05 am

If by ‘blaze of glory’ he means ‘gored to death by an aggressive grizzly, or expiring from malnutrition or food poisoning whilst confined to a ruinous trappers cabin, unable to generate the energy to get off the urine-soaked mattress in unbearable pain as his vital organs cannibalize his little remaining body fat as Chris McCandless did 30years earlier’, then glory be. Or maybe just asphyxiated by the forest smoke from an encircling blaze, then I think you’ll find he won’t be missed or eulogized in a Sean Penn movie!

Up 15 Down 1

Anne North on Jul 30, 2019 at 12:02 pm

I think this opportunist has had his 15 minutes of fame and now he should just go away quietly.

Up 13 Down 3

Juniper Jackson on Jul 29, 2019 at 5:49 pm

There is no such thing as a 'blaze of glory'.. there is just dead.

Not much regard for this man, who is unworthy to bear the title of 'father'.

Up 24 Down 5

North_of_60 on Jul 27, 2019 at 3:43 pm

These young men look white, so their upbringing won't be a valid excuse if they've committed these crimes.

Up 11 Down 28

Norm on Jul 26, 2019 at 9:40 pm

Wow, pretty hateful comments when you don’t even know the truth. Obviously mental health issues involved and everyone just becomes judge and jury hang em high style. Trashing the parents who likely have emotional health issues doesn’t help either. Kids are watching, set examples.

Up 19 Down 3

BnR on Jul 26, 2019 at 7:56 pm

One picture is worth a thousand words.....
Daddy?

Up 10 Down 14

WhySensationalize on Jul 26, 2019 at 7:26 pm

Shame on the Whitehorse Star for putting out a quote that could have been left out of story. Why put it in print, really?!

Up 31 Down 3

Dan Davidson on Jul 26, 2019 at 3:15 pm

"blaze of glory"??!! Hate the title, but you were quoting the father, who really should have known better than to say that.

Up 38 Down 2

Mr M on Jul 26, 2019 at 12:11 pm

The kids are old enough to know better. I feel sorry for the upbringing of these two. Now three people are dead because of their upbringing. Just can't understand society and the way people think. RIP all who have died due to the poor parenting of these kids. Also to the families that have lost their loved ones my condolences and sympathy go out to you.

Up 51 Down 6

Loser on Jul 26, 2019 at 9:40 am

“He hasn’t been nurtured. He doesn’t have a driver’s licence. He never learned to ride a bike. He craved love and affection,” he said.
Wow, really pal? Where were you in his life then?
What a sad excuse for a human being, let alone a supposed dad.

Up 36 Down 3

YT on Jul 26, 2019 at 7:14 am

Someone’s got a warped idea of what glory is.

Up 11 Down 43

Lara on Jul 26, 2019 at 6:07 am

Thank you for reporting that these people are humans and in pain. Not deep seeded evil-minded bad guys. We need to ask more often - what happened to these guys to set them off this way? Why aren't we able to care for them? It is way more appealing for media to portray a country-wide chase inevitably ending in Thelma and Louise story line. As a reporter you are one of the few who can diffuse the situation.... maybe they don't have to go out in a blaze of glory. My heart breaks for them and all the victims in this scenario. Thank you again for reporting on them as humans.

Up 43 Down 3

father of the year on Jul 25, 2019 at 10:02 pm

That guy should not be called a father. He's a p.o.s. looking for sympathy and publicity. Where were you when your kid was an impressionable little guy? Nowhere. Check out the BC court database on this guy, in and out of jail etc. not exactly model citizen. Whoever speaks like that of their child is sick.

Up 52 Down 1

Dave on Jul 25, 2019 at 3:52 pm

Blaze of glory nothing, if it happens he’ll go out in a flicker of shame. To millions of people he will just be remembered as one of those two psycho guys who killed the nice young couple.

Up 38 Down 3

JustAPoorMisunderstoodKid on Jul 25, 2019 at 3:31 pm

(He) “is a kind, considerate, caring young man”, especially when he puts his nazi black shirt on, slips on his swastika armband, and heads to the old folks home to sing along to old show tunes with the seniors.

Up 49 Down 5

Yukon56 on Jul 25, 2019 at 3:16 pm

Blaze of glory? WTF Die like the people you have killed. NO GLORY - Bad title to this story.

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