'It will be healing': Whitefish Lake First Nation memorializing slain teens - Action News
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'It will be healing': Whitefish Lake First Nation memorializing slain teens

A rural reserve in northern Alberta is beginning to heal from the violent deaths of two teens by memorializing their lives.

The first annual Dylan Laboucan Memorial Basketball Tournament takes place Friday at Atikameg School

Dylan Laboucan, left, and his gifted girlfriend, Cory Grey, right, were shot to death last summer. (Becky Thunder )

A rural reserve in northern Alberta is beginning to heal from the violent deaths of two teens last summer by memorializing their lives.

The families of Dylan Laboucan, 17, and Cory Grey, 19, were caught up in a whirlwind of events when the pairwent missing at the end of July 2016 just daysbefore they planned to move from Whitefish Lake First Nation to Slave Lake, where they were going to start college.

The teens, in love and inseparable in life,were found shot to death kilometres apart on the reserve. It was atragic end to a frantic searchthat brought hundreds of peopleto the community.

Nearly eight months later, Cory Grey's father, Louis Grey, said that the continued supportis getting them through a difficult time,allowing them to carry on thepositive legacy their children have left behind.

The community and the surrounding people, they care.- Cory Grey's father Louis Grey

"Thatthey keep remembering, them," he said,"It's nice. It shows that the community and the surrounding people, they care."

The first annual Dylan Laboucan Memorial Basketball Tournament is taking place Friday in the gymnasium of Atikameg School, where Laboucan spent many hours on the court. More than 60 students from First Nation reserveand Metis settlement schools in the area are playing in his name.

'He'd be very honoured'

Laboucan's mother, Becky Thunder, said the event is not only meaningful to her and her husband, Leo Laboucan, but also to Laboucan'syoung siblings and friends who are playing for him.

"He'd be very honoured and happy that these kids are coming together and doing what he loved," Thunder said.

While Thunder sees thetournament as a positive step forward, she said there are a lot of tears behind it.
Dylan Laboucan spent many hours on the court of the Atikameg School gymnasium. (Laboucan family)
"It's tough for us," Thunder said. "Whatever we do, he's always with us. He's always in our hearts."

Without theperseverance of Deen Flett, who works with student athletes at Atikameg School throughKitaskinaw Tribal Council, Thunder said it probably wouldn't have come to fruition.

"It will behealing," Flett said. "It was a tragedy, but when you keep going on with life and doing good stuff like this, some people will kind of start to move on."

Flett, from the nearbyGift Lake Metis Settlement, only started working in the community after Laboucan and Grey died. But hewas still touchedby their story and feltcompelled to organize the tournament.

"I wish I knew these two kids," said Flett, who reached out to Thunder after learning about her son's passion forbasketball."It would have been so awesome to work with this young couple."

"I'm glad I'm doing this. It's an honour for me."

Jersey numbers being retired

(Laboucan family)
At the tournament, Laboucan's number, 7, is being retired. The same will be done for Grey, an avid volleyball player whose number was 13.

Louis Grey said his daughter was by her boyfriend's side no matter what; when Laboucan was playing basketball, she was always there with him. He said his family will be at AtikamegSchool for the basketball tournament, just like she would have been.

EdwardDevinBoyceGladue, of Whitefish Lake First Nation, is charged with two counts of second-degree murder in the teens' shooting deaths.

Gladue, who knew the young lovers,is scheduled to appear in High Prairie court on June 8 for a preliminary hearing to determine whether there is enough evidence to proceed to trial.

The families have had a break from court since December, whichis a relief but also weighs heavily on their hearts.

"We're at a stand still," Thunder said. "We're doing the best we can to live every day and survive."
Young lovers Dylan Laboucan,17, and Cory Grey, 19, were days away from moving from Whitefish Lake First Nation to Slave Lake, where they were going to start college. (Supplied by Becky Thunder )

roberta.bell@cbc.ca

@roberta__bell