Mounties say a vehicle reported stolen in the Grand Bay-Westfield area has been found torched.
Police say the black and grey 2017 Chevrolet Aveo was found burnt in the Welsford area on Monday.
The car was stolen from outside a home on Sunset Valley Road in Nerepis.
Investigators say it is believed to have happened between 9 p.m. on July 11 and 9:30 a.m. on July 12.
The vehicle is described as black with a grey roof with New Brunswick license plate number GSG 946.
Police are asking anyone with information on the incident or who may have seen the vehicle to contact them.
Stolen Vehicle Found Torched, RCMP Seek Help
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Local Matters - Harbour Hospice honours long-serving volunteers
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Constable David Goldfinch describes how the shooter came after him with a gun and how he believed he would die. He then got out of the car, shot Hunt dead and fired numerous times at Goldfinch before leaving in a car driven by Bracken. On Friday, Shane Conza told the court how Epiha and a woman, who he now knows to be Bracken, arrived at his Taupaki property shortly before midday. Conza and Epiha had been friends for about six years. “He wanted me to drive him somewhere,” Conza said. Conza took some of Epiha’s belongings out of the Mazda that Bracken had been driving, and put them in his car.
Animals - Poisoned petsBy: David Haugh
When animals are known to have swallowed something poisonous or present with symptoms suggestive of poisoning, we often follow familiar, standard procedures. For example, our most common dog poisoning is caused by rat bait. If you know it has just been eaten, and we can make the dog vomit it up within one or two hours, that is usually all we have to do. If it is too late for that, and because symptoms take a minimum of 48 hours to manifest, there is time to start the vitamin K antidote. Even if the animal is near death from loss of blood, a blood transfusion, in conjunction with vit K, can turn things around. Sadly, most poisons have no antidote and treatment is supportive only.