Nathan O'Brien Amber Alert: Final search of Liknes home ends - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 09:57 AM | Calgary | -14.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Nathan O'Brien Amber Alert: Final search of Liknes home ends

Police say after multiple searches they have ended the investigation into the Parkhill home where three Calgary family members were last seen on June 29.

Police say nothing more to search at home of missing boy's grandparents after final sweep

Police say after multiple searches they have ended the investigation intothe Parkhill home where three Calgary family members were last seen on June 29.

The home belongs to the grandparents of five-year-old Nathan O'Brien, Kathy and AlvinLiknes. The three were discovered missing the following morning when Nathan's mother arrived to pick him up from a sleepover.

Douglas Garland, who police call a 'person of intertest,' has been released on bail. (Sketch: Janice Fletcher)

Police say there was evidence a violent crime occurred in the southwest Calgaryhome.

Following an initial search of the house, police returned last weekend and extended the perimeter of their search area. They returned again Saturdayfor a final sweep but now say they have "released the home from police continuity," meaning it will no longer be the subject of police searches.

The search for evidence will continue this week at the Spyhill Landfill in Calgarywhere investigators are still sifting through mounds of garbage.

Police will also continue to search anacreage in Airdrie, located northof the city, which isconnected with what police describe as a "person of interest" in this case.

Douglas Garland, 54, was taken from his parents' acreage to answer police questions about the casebut was ultimately released from questioning on that matter.

Police kept him in custody and charged him with an unrelated count of identity theft and unlawful possession of a bank card. Thecharge is related to the recent use of the stolen identity of a 14-year-old Alberta boy who died in 1980.

Garland has since been released on bail.

Criminal history related to drug bust, stolen ID

Garland does have a criminal historythatincludes drug trafficking and possession of stolen property after he was caught making amphetamines on his parents' acreage in 1992.

Rod O'Brien, right, and Jennifer O'Brien, centre, attend a candlelight vigil for their missing son. Nathan O'Brien, 5, and his grandparents Alvin and Kathryn Liknes have been missing since June 29. (Jeff McIntosh/Canadian Press)

The then-33-year-old Garland fled those charges and a document from the Tax Court of Canada indicates he was later discovered living under that stolen identity in Vancouver.

He returned to Calgaryand pleaded guilty to several of the charges in connection to the drug bust and the stolen identity.

The identity theft charge Garland faces now is specifically in relation to the recent use of that stolen identity he used in the 1990s.

His bail on that charge was set at $750 on Friday and Garland faces a set of restrictions, including reporting three times a week to a supervisor and once a week to police.

He must also live in transitional housing and can't return to his parents' Airdrie acreage while it is under police investigation.

'Bad blood' between Garland, Liknes

CBC News has also learned that Garland has several connections with the Liknes family.

His sister is in a common-law relationship with Alvin Liknes's son and investigators have also been looking into the business relationship between Garland and Liknes.

Sources say abusiness deal between the two went sour, leading to "bad blood,"and Calgary police are investigating a patent dispute as part of their probe into the case.

Winter Petroleum, a junior gas company owned by Liknes, went bankrupt near the end of June just days before the family went missing.

Liknes had registered a patent for an apparatus that separates gas from water.

"There are some business issues that we are looking into," said Calgary police spokespersonKevin Brookwell on Thursday. "I can't get into specifics about what these are and who was involved, what they look like or how many people were involved. But yes, we have got a number of people who are looking into that."

Court records also show that both Alvin and KathrynLiknes have declared bankruptcy in the past Alvin in 1994 andKathrynjust two years ago.

According to records, Liknes was involved in several civil lawsuits in the 1980s and early 1990s. He was the defendant in two cases four years ago.