Skip to main content

Prince George Citizen September 26, 2024

Page 1

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2024

PRINCE GEORGE CITIZEN

12,000 Jackpot

1

$

SUPER BINGO

($7,500 cash plus $4,500 Slot Free Play)

0

58307

00200

5

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28TH Saturday Evening Bingo at 6pm

Woodwork & Renovat ing Oct ion 1-3

SAL E

Extra Discou nt During Our s 3-DAY SALE

30-year-old murder still haunts lives Tiffany McKinney of Prince George was killed for her car CHRISTINE DALGLEISH Citizen Staff

It’s been 30 years since Tiffany McKinney’s brutal murder on Sept. 24,1994, and one woman who grew up with the convicted murderers and who sees the world very differently because of that wants the 19-year-old victim to be remembered. It all started when McKinney moved to Quesnel for work. A week later she was bludgeoned to death in a nightmare of a story of plotting and planning the cold-blooded killing of an innocent woman with hopes and dreams of becoming an artist. McKinney moved from her childhood Prince George home and a week later she was dead, her mother, Pat Keckalo, said in an article in The Prince George Citizen dated March 18,1995.

CITIZEN FILE PHOTO

Tiffany McKinney of Prince George, who wanted to become an artist, was targeted by two acquaintances who killed her for her car after she moved to Quesnel in 1994.

The details of the murder were laid out during the trial, chronicled by The Prince George Citizen and the Quesnel

Observer in September 1996. The jury heard how her killers knew McKinney, wanted her car, so they

3-DAY SAL

1

October 17 E -19

$AVE

www.kmstoo

ls.com

prepared her grave before hitting her in the head 12 times to put an end to her life at that wooded grave site in September 1994. By spring of 1995, she was still considered missing, with The Citizen updating the case in a front-page story on March 18. Soon after, the men were charged and told police where her body was. Lana Jamieson grew up in Quesnel where the killers, Robert Edward Copeland and Paul Charles Forknall, lived, too, and it changed her perspective on the whole world. Jamieson was 16 at the time of the murder and said she knew McKinney but only during the last year of her life. “Things that stand out to me now as an adult are I think about how brave she was; moving to another town (Quesnel) to start fresh and was really just beginning to figure out who she was,” Jamieson said in a recent email to The Citizen. PLEASE SEE ‘MURDER’ ON PAGE 2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook