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OCTOBER 8, 2013
Reach a Reader reaches out Thursday | Page 6
Soccer Olympians in the EK > Herdman, LeBlanc hold clinic in Fernie | Page 9
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Vol. 61, Issue 196
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TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO
Gord McArthur of Cranbrook signs a few autographs following his presentation to students at Mount Baker Secondary School Monday morning. McArthur is Cranbrook’s latest Olympian, and will be heading off to Sochi, Russia, in a few months to represent Canada in the demonstration sport of Ice Climbing.
The mists Hopley given pass for mother’s funeral of time Dangerous offender hearing set for this week stood down Monday afternoon Highlands PAC seeking info on school time capsule, starting with location ARNE PETRYSHEN Townsman Staff
Somewhere beneath the Highlands Elementary schoolyard is a time capsule buried 31 years ago by Grade 7 students. The exact whereabouts of the capsule, however, are no longer known. Lori Harris, who was a student in that class, said there was once a map, but it was misplaced or lost at some point. She is hopeful that this year the capsule can be unearthed. “Everything that we did that year we put it in that time capsule,”
she said. “I don’t remember what I put in, but I guess everybody in the class put something in.” She hopes that they might be able to find someone who owns a metal detector and is interested in doing a sweep of the likely area. Otherwise, Harris plans to get a group of her classmates together to pinpoint the location. Then it would be a matter of seeing whether anyone with a backhoe would be willing to dig it up.
See TIME, Page 3
SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff
Randall Hopley was given a break from his dangerous offender hearing in Cranbrook on Monday so he could attend his mother’s funeral. Hopley, 48, faces sentencing this week for the September 2011 kidnapping of three-yearold Kienan Hebert from his home in Sparwood. Crown prosecutor Lynal Doerksen is seeking dangerous offender status for Hopley, which sets apart offenders of violent or sexual crimes who are deemed likely to reoffend and whose release is considered a threat to society. If Justice Heather Holmes decides Hopley is a dangerous offender, he would receive an automatic sentence of imprisonment for an indeterminate period, with
BARRY COULTER PHOTO
Randall Hopley is escorted into Cranbrook’s courthoouse on Monday, Oct. 7. no chance of parole for seven years. An hour into the hearing on Monday, October 7, defense counsel William Thorne asked Justice Holmes to consider allowing Hopley to attend his mother’s fu-
neral in Fernie that afternoon. Thorne told the court that Hopley’s mother, Margaret Fink, passed away last week, just days before she was planning to visit her son in custody in Cranbrook.
Justice Holmes agreed Hopley could attend the funeral Monday afternoon, under the guard of sheriffs, returning to Cranbrook Monday evening. The sentencing hearing was stood down to
allow Hopley to travel to Fernie, and will reconvene Tuesday morning. It is scheduled to carry on through the week, concluding on Friday, October 11.
See HOPLEY , Page 4