'This tragedy, it affects 5 families': Bryer Schmegelsky's great uncle speaks out - Action News
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'This tragedy, it affects 5 families': Bryer Schmegelsky's great uncle speaks out

John McNabb, the brother of Bryer Schmegelsky's grandmother, says "it's just inconceivable to the family that this has happened."

John McNabb says family is struggling to reconcile the man they knew with the crimes he's accused of

'It's just inconceivable to the family that this has happened ... our hearts and prayers go out to the other families,' says John McNabb, the great-uncle of Bryer Schmegelsky, one of the men accused in three northern B.C. murders. (CBC)

The great-uncle ofBryer Schmegelsky, one of the men accused in connection to three northern B.C. murders which sparked a national manhunt, says he shares the grief of the victims' families.

"This tragedy, it affects five families," saidJohn McNabb, the brother of Schmegelsky's grandmother."It's just inconceivable to the family that this has happened ... Our hearts and prayers go out to the other families."

McNabb says his sister was like a surrogate parent to Schmegelsky, 19, and is devastated by the loss.

"It's very much like losing a child... you're not supposed to beburying your children, they're supposed to beburying you."

A still taken from surveillance footage released by the RCMP shows Kam McLeod, left, and Bryer Schmegelsky leaving a store in Meadow Lake, Sask., on July 21. (RCMP)

McNabb says he sawSchmegelsky the day before hedeparted withKam McLeod on their fateful trip up north, ostensibly to find work in Whitehorse.

The pair were charged July 24 with second-degree murder in the death of botanist Leonard Dyck. The 64-year-old was found dead July 19 at a highway pullout about two kilometres from a burned-outcamper truck believed to have been driven byMcLeod and Schmegelsky south of the B.C.'s Stikine River Bridge on Highway 37.

The lifelong friends are also suspected of gunning down a young couple, Lucas Fowler, 23, an Australian, and Chynna Deese, 24, an American. Their bodies were found on the Alaska Highway, south of Liard Hot Springs, B.C., on July 15.

The two men fled east, sparking a weeks-long massive cross-Canadasearch.

On Wednesday, their remains were foundin dense brush in northern Manitoba, eight kilometres northeast of where a burned-out Toyota RAV4, which police believe the two fugitives were driving, was found.

'The side of folks that we see and think we see'

McNabb said the entire family is reeling from trying to reconcilethe "polite, kind, young fellow" they knew with whatSchmegelskyhas been accused of.

"If you met these two fellows, they were not people you would be afraid of."

John McNabb on the family trying to reconcile theBryerSchmegelskythey knew with what happened

'Inconceivable that this has happened'

5 years ago
Duration 0:44
John McNabb says his family is struggling to reconcile the man they knew with the crimes he's accused of.

He said speaking to the staff sergeant in charge of the investigation had provided some comfort.

"He indicated that [it's]not unusual that theside of folks that we see and think we seeon a daily basis can change given some input that we don't know about," McNabb said.

But with their deaths, McNabb says closure will be difficult to get.

"We were hoping that they would be found and captured and that the story of how this all unfolded would be available ... [their deaths] are going to make ita lot more difficult for the RCMP to come up with with what really happened."

With files from Tanya Fletcher