'It's been a lot of heartache': Sisters of Lennox Island man still searching for answers - Action News
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'It's been a lot of heartache': Sisters of Lennox Island man still searching for answers

Kelly Sark and Val Jadis say their family has experienced a lot of heartbreak since their brother Jamie Sark went missing last summer. As the investigation into his death continues, they're asking anyone with information to come forward and help answer questions about what happened.

'Thank you so much for helping us this far... we still need more prayers'

Two women hold up a photo of a young man in a ball cap.
Kelly Sark and Val Jadis say their family has experienced a lot of heartbreak since their brother Jamie Sark went missing last summer. As the investigation into his death continues, they're asking anyone with information to come forward and help their family find answers about what happened. (Tony Davis/CBC)

Kelly Sarkand Val Jadiswere getting ready to havecake with their family when they heardthe latest news.

This was last Monday, on what would have been their brother Jamie Sark's29th birthday.

Sark's body was found Nov. 12 in a heavily wooded area on Lennox Island First Nation. He had been missing from his home in the community since late August.

Kelly Sark said just as her family was getting ready to cut thecake in her brother's memory,they learned that RCMPofficers investigating his case were conducting searches at two Lennox Island properties.

In the family's first major interview since the young man's remains were found, Sark said the news about the searches felt like a step forward.

"Everything happened all of a sudden. It was kind of, like, bittersweet, but it was good to see things start to happen," she told CBC News.

Search for answers continues

For Jadis, last week's development in this case brought a sense of hope after months of heartache for her familyhope that the investigation is moving forward and getting closer to finding outabout what happened to Jamie.

"It's been a lot of heartache since Jamie went missing, since my mom put out the post that he wasn't around," she said. "So we started looking, like messaging him and everything and I don't know. You just get this gut feeling that something is really wrong."

After their brother vanished, Sark and Jadis spent countless days searching for him. That search began within the community of Lennox Island and circled out to the surrounding woods and fields beforeeventually expandingto Nova Scotia.The family also offered a $5,000 reward for information.

One of the many photos of Jamie Sark that his sister Kelly posted on social media in the months after his disappearance in August 2021. (Facebook)

Jadis saidshe's grateful to everyone in the community who came out to help with the search.

"We had a solid crew with us every time we wanted to go to the woods. We had strangers help us make posters and put those up," shesaid.

Sark said it was good to see support from communities outside P.E.I., specifically from theMembertou First Nation andMembertou Men's Society, a support group for Indigenous men, which also posted information about Jamie in the hope of locating him.

"We hit the ground running," Sark said. "As soon as we knew something was up, we were in the woods. We were searching the woods solid for three, four months every other day, just going, running off fumes, non-stop."

A drone view of Lennox Island
Sark and Jadis spent countless days searching for their brother, beginning within the community of Lennox Island, reaching out to the surrounding woods and fields, and eventually expanding that search to Nova Scotia. The family also offered a $5,000 reward for information about where Jamie Sark could be. ( Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Jadis said thatduring the first few weeks of their search, the group did scan the area where Jamie'sbodywas eventually found, so they were surprised when police shared that location.

"We were very close multiple times. It's crazy how we didn't find him," Sark said.

Regarding the search, Sark saidshe thinks some things could have been done differently, and certain areas should have been checked more thoroughly but still, she feels fortunate that her brother was found, and they could bring him home.

'My little light'

As they started thinking back to a time before Jamie went missing, Sark and Jadisshared smiles and laughed.

"Jamie was my little brother, my little light," Jadis said. "He was a good young man. He always strived to be better, to do better. He was trying to find the right path in life."

She said he was trying to get into rehab before he went missing, andwas always looking to learn new skills,taking a number of courses to get different certifications.She said he was also getting into making traditional baskets.

Jadissaid Jamie took care of his family no matter what. He'd take the shirt off his shouldersand give it to you if you needed it, Sark added.

One of Sark's favourite memoriesinvolves pictures of Jamietaking a first-aid course. She laughs as she describes the image of him wrapped in bandages, allowing someone to practise on him.

'He was a good young man,' says Jamie's sister Val Jadis. 'He always strived to be better, to do better. He was trying to find the right path in life.' (Prince District RCMP)

"He was really goofy," Sark said. "I don't think I'll get those belly laughs with anyone else, besides my sister."

Sark and Jadis say these positive memories, and the support of the rest of their family, have allowedthem to carry on and continue their search for answers.

"You've got to keep thinking positive, because if you don't, like I said, it comes in waves and then you start thinking too much and it just hurts so much," Sark said.

"I still can't believe we're going through this," Jadis added.

Investigation ongoing

Sark said the most frustrating part of this experience is waiting for answers. She said she and her family follow up with the RCMP every other week in search of updates, but so far details have been few and far between.

"There's a lot of injustice for people who go missing," Sark said. "Some people kind of get forgotten through social media and news outlets and stuff like that. I think that's what drove me and my sister and my family to keep speaking about Jamie."

While the RCMP investigation goes on, the family is still looking for any tips or information about what happened to Jamie Sark.

Sark said when Jamie's body was found, some of his personal items were missing. She is asking anyone with information about where those items might be to come forward.

"I want to say thank you forall the people in P.E.I., on Turtle Island, even the states, were out looking and helping and sharing his info," Sark said. "Thank you so much for helping us this far, and that we still need more prayers because we're not done yet."

'I really miss him so much,' Val Jadis says of her little brother Jamie. (Tony Davis/CBC)

RCMPtold CBC News on Monday that there are nofurther developments to report in the investigation following the search of the two Lennox Island properties last week.

No arrests have been made in the case, but Jamie Sark's sisters say they have been told polygraph tests have been administered.

The force held aseries of drop-in sessionson the First Nationlast November and December so that anyone couldvolunteer information about Sark'sdisappearance and death.

Police urge anyone with something to share to contact CrimeStoppers or the RCMP in East Princeat 902-436-9300.

With files from Tony Davis