sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

N.S. police board nixes complaints against Truro police in case of missing 3-year-old

HALIFAX 鈥 Nova Scotia鈥檚 Police Review Board has dismissed complaints against the Truro Police Service brought forward by the parents of a three-year-old boy who has been missing since spring 2020.
20230807110848-a4daf74bcf894cec1cd108e55381b1c3cbe8aceaed6b3bdb0f1e0a47db1f5b08
Rescue crews search for a missing three-year-old boy in the waters of the Salmon River in Truro, N.S. on Thursday, May 7, 2020. The Nova Scotia Police Review Board has dismissed complaints against the Truro Police Service brought forward by the parents of a three-year-old boy who has been missing since spring 2020.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

HALIFAX 鈥 Nova Scotia鈥檚 Police Review Board has dismissed complaints against the Truro Police Service brought forward by the parents of a three-year-old boy who has been missing since spring 2020.

Dylan Ehler disappeared from his grandmother鈥檚 backyard on May 6, 2020, with police and first responders searching for a week but finding only his rubber boots in the nearby Lepper Brook.

Ehler鈥檚 parents, Jason Ehler and Ashley Brown, accused Truro police of not adequately investigating their son鈥檚 disappearance, claiming the police failed to 鈥渞ealistically pursue and investigate the prospect of criminality,鈥 among other claims.

They also said the police force operated with 鈥渢unnel vision,鈥 pursuing the theory that their son drowned at the expense of other possible explanations.

The family says ground search and rescue efforts should have been activated immediately, along with divers from the Coast Guard or RCMP, and an emergency alert should have been requested.

The police board鈥檚 decision, released July 17, acknowledged the parents of a small child who went missing would want 鈥渆very possible lead, every possible tip, and every possible area searched for, and for [Truro police] to act quickly.鈥

But, the decision reads, the police 鈥渃annot override the law and they are subject to procedures that must be followed in given situations,鈥 concluding the police force acted reasonably both in initially responding to the report of a missing child and in the subsequent investigation.

The family said police didn鈥檛 properly search the nearby woods or stream 鈥渨ithin a timely manner,鈥 but the board determined an officer was on the scene within four minutes of Dylan鈥檚 grandmother calling 911.

The three-person board said it was satisfied the police force arrived at the scene as quickly as possible and followed appropriate policies and procedures, and didn鈥檛 deny any resources to ground search and rescue teams who subsequently took the lead on the investigation.

Truro police also called in backup from RCMP, the provincial Department of Natural Resources and CN Rail police, all of whom 鈥渨ere engaged quickly.鈥

Dominic Fewer, the province鈥檚 regional manager of emergency management operations, told police an Amber Alert wasn鈥檛 possible, the decision says, but a 鈥渘on-intrusive alert鈥 was issued.

The decision notes the search efforts continued for six days, including 18 hours of aerial searching.

鈥淎lthough the complainants feel the resources were not dispatched as soon as they should be, decisions on when and how to use the additional resources were made by those trained in the best way to effect a search, namely (ground search and rescue) and not (Truro police),鈥 the decision reads.

The local fire department searched Lepper Brook when the stream was 鈥渦nusually high and dangerous,鈥 which the board said indicated the efforts made to find the young child.

Following the review board鈥檚 weeklong hearing, lawyers for the Truro police said they had not provided all of the information in Dylan鈥檚 file, as that could have jeopardized future investigations or criminal charges if new information were to come to light.

The board said it usually requires full disclosure between parties and said the police should have first presented all documents and then asked for the sensitive information to be withheld. The authority to determine what is relevant to the case lies with the board, the decision reads.

鈥淗aving said that, the board appreciates the sensitivity of the matter and is prepared to allow the determination to take place in this case and move on to try to bring a conclusion in the matter to Dylan鈥檚 parents."

The report notes Dylan鈥檚 case remains open to this day.

The Truro police and representatives for Ehler and Brown did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 7, 2023.

Marlo Glass, The Canadian Press