Skip to main content

Buck Lake fire that killed 2 children not suspicious: RCMP

Mounties stationed themselves outside a home in the Buck Lake, Alta., area on June 2, 2021, after a fire which killed two children. Mounties stationed themselves outside a home in the Buck Lake, Alta., area on June 2, 2021, after a fire which killed two children.
Share
EDMONTON -

Investigators have concluded a fire in central Alberta in which two young children died didn't start in a suspicious way.

Their bodies were found in the charred wreckage of a home in the Buck Lake area, southwest of Edmonton, after the June 2 blaze was put out.

Mounties on Friday said the fire investigator found the fire was "non-suspicious in origin," but nothing more about how it started.

Officials said police were called around 11 a.m. that day, but by the time they arrived on scene, the house was already engulfed by flames.

The identity of the victims – a one-year-old boy and a four-year-old girl – from Drayton Valley, Alta., were confirmed two days later.

Buck Lake is located south of Drayton Valley, southwest of Edmonton.

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Mussolini's wartime bunker opens to the public in Rome

After its last closure in 2021, it has now reopened for guided tours of the air raid shelter and the bunker. The complex now includes a multimedia exhibition about Rome during World War II, air raid systems for civilians, and the series of 51 Allied bombings that pummeled the city between July 1943 and May 1944.

WATCH

WATCH Half of Canadians living paycheque-to-paycheque: Equifax

As Canadians deal with a crushing housing shortage, high rental prices and inflationary price pressures, now Equifax Canada is warning that Canadian consumers are increasingly under stress"from the surging cost of living.

Stay Connected