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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Livestock Semi Rollover near Hanna last night

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On March 22, at 10:45 p.m., the RCMP, Fire and EMS were called to a semi rollover on Highway 36. The semi was hauling 97 head of cattle.

EMS transported the semi driver to the Hanna Hospital where he was admitted and subsequently transported to Red Deer Hospital. His injuries are not believed to be life threatening.

The Hanna Fire Department removed the surviving animals from the trailer and corralled them onto a piece of land adjacent to the rollover scene where they will be safe until the owner can pick them up. It is believed about 5 cows died as a result of the rollover.

High winds and icy road conditions are believed to be factors in the cause of the rollover.


37 years later, Kelly Cook murder remains unsolved

KELLY COOK - submitted

After 37 years, the family of Kelly Cook, a 15-year-old girl from Standard who was abducted and murdered, still face each day with the thought of what was taken from them.
On April 22, 1981, Marnie Kathol, the younger sister of Kelly, who was 12 at that time, watched from her family home’s basement window as Kelly stepped into a car purportedly for a babysitting job. This is the last time Marnie saw her sister.
“To say we miss her… for sure. But I don’t think we can actually miss her being anymore because it has been so many years, but we definitely miss what should be,” said Marnie. “For my family, there is barely a day that goes by, but for the community, it is something that has happened in the past, but people have not forgotten her.”
Now 37 years later, the Murder of Kelly Cook is still unsolved, and it still draws interest from the media and the public. One of the reasons may be that on the surface the story seems so innocuous, but turns into a nightmare in a small, trusting town. A young girl gets a call for a babysitting job from a man named Bill Christensen. This is a surname that is common in the area, and although she has never met the man, a friend had referred her. She agrees to the job and tells her family she will call when she is settled at the job.
She is picked up from her home, and that is the last time she is seen alive. The family did not receive a call.
Kelly’s family called the RCMP when they had not heard from their daughter. In the coming days, a local search turned up nothing, and police began to gather clues.

A composite sketch of a suspect in the murder of Kelly Cook of Standard.

A composite sketch of a suspect in the murder of Kelly Cook of Standard. submitted

 

They made a composite sketch of a man about 30-40 years of age, about 5’ 10” with a medium build.
Two months later, on June 29, her body was discovered in the Chin Lake Reservoir south of Taber.
“I think the public doesn’t know any more or any less than we do. I think what we know is what is out there,” said Marnie. “I know that it is still very much in the limelight and the RCMP still look at it and it is very much a part of their day. But the individuals that are responsible for her case are also responsible for current major crimes as well, so you want their resources to go to the right places. I certainly wouldn’t want them to focus on our case when there is so much other bad going on in the world right now.”
According to reports, police have investigated more than 2,000 possible suspects over the years, but have never been able to make an arrest.
While she understands that the case being in the public discourse could be helpful, at the same time there is a community of amateur sleuths online who may get carried away.
“I have been contacted by people that are very much involved in these (sleuth) sites, and with the couple people I have been contacted by, in no way are they helping. They are very quick to point fingers at people…I think it is a form of slander myself when they print these people’s names on these websites,” she said.
She hopes that with the proper information out there, it may help with a break in the case.
“That is what we believe, and I think that is what the RCMP believe, that it is going to come from someone,” she said. “They told us years ago it would more than likely be solved through a deathbed confession or a turn of events in people’s lives. A scorned wife or girlfriend who would just say, ‘I’m not keeping your secret anymore.’”

Teen director utilizes valley’s unique movie locations

Director Brandon Watson, 17, checks the exposure and lighting of the room before the biggest scene of the movie is recorded on Saturday, March 17, at the old court house. mailphoto by Terri Huxley

A 17-year-old filmmaker takes on a Hollywood challenge by filming in the Drumheller valley. Brandon Watson of Cornwall, Ontario, is the 17-year-old director, writer and producer of a new film called ‘Supposition’.
The production is filming in Drumheller at the old Courthouse until April 6.
“The Town of Drumheller has been unbelievably supportive and accommodating and so helpful,” said Watson. “Keith Almberg who owns this building has been extremely supportive and accommodating of the production, Julia Fielding with the Town of Drumheller has also been unbelievable getting us connected with the right people and organized, so we feel really blessed to be able to shoot here and work with all these great people that are helping us out.”
The story revolves around a group of first-year law students attending the fictitious Southfield, Colorado University of Law. When their professor, Professor Peterson, (Tahmoh Penikett of Supernatural, Altered Carbon, Battlestar Galactica) is murdered, student Chloe Russel (Zahra Kavyani) is taken in and charged for committing the crime. Fellow student Calvin West (Justin Toth), convinced that Chloe was framed, sets out to discover the truth behind the murder.
Supposition is considered to be a word for reasonable theory which is alluded to throughout the film. “It’s like a fact or something that is supposed but not proven, but it seems pretty reasonable,” said Watson. Watson sees the film as something unique in nature as there is a hefty challenge set in place.
Robert Rodriguez is a director who has filmed many movies such as Spy Kids and Machete. Rodriguez worked with a micro-budget of $7,000 to produce his first film El Mariachi where he broke a Guinness World Record for lowest budget feature film to make $1 million at the box office.
Since then, he has issued a challenge for fellow directors to make a feature film for $7,000 or less.
“That’s what we are doing with Supposition,” began Watson. “We are going for that challenge but more importantly the world record for producing a feature film with this micro-budget and with the goal of making over a million at the box office. We’ve got interest from a few major distributors who could certainly make that happen; and we think with just the story alone of a 17-year-old producing a feature film for $7,000, that it’s not unreasonable to reach for that goal.”
A few scenes will be filmed in High River and Calgary but the majority of the movie will be filmed within Drumheller, mainly at the Courthouse. “That’s the thing about this building that we are in [...] We were just looking for a courtroom and we ended up finding that we could shoot half of our movie here,” said Watson. “This is a very versatile and unique location and I think honestly after we are done here, I wouldn’t be surprised if many other productions start coming out here and booking this place. I would very much advise them to do so.”
The father and son duo could not give Drumheller enough praise for both its welcoming nature and secret hidden talents. “The thing is, there is so much talent here that would otherwise go undiscovered,” said Watson. “Our cast of people here are local actors and some of them have little to no experience but they are so talented that I feel like we are really lucky to have come across this new group of people. It’s like finding diamonds or gold.”


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