Letter threats from purported bomber troubling: EnCana - Action News
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British Columbia

Letter threats from purported bomber troubling: EnCana

A spokesperson for energy giant EnCana says the latest threatening letter sent to a newspaper in northeastern B.C. is troubling.
A saboteur's bomb blast last Oct. 12 created a 1.8-metre-wide crater near an EnCana natural-gas pipeline about 50 kilometres east of Dawson Creek in northern B.C. ((CBC))
Energy giant EnCana Corp. says the latest threateningletter sent to a newspaper in northeastern B.C. is troubling but won't change the firm's oil and gas development plans.

Spokesman Alan Boras told The Canadian Press on Thursday the company isn't leaving the area, despite sixpipeline bombings in less than a year and the threats aimed atEnCanain the letter.

"These are criminal acts that are endangering the lives of the people who work for our company and contractors who work for us and people who live in the community where we operate," he said.

"...you are indeed vulnerable, can be rendered helpless despite your mega-funds, your political influence, craftiness and deceit in which you trusted." Letter to EnCana, sent to Dawson Creek Daily News on Wednesday

"These bombs are not only an attack on our workers but they are an attack on the communities and the people who live there and make their living there."

The letter warned EnCana that if it doesn't shut down its operations in northeastern B.C., the bombings that have damaged the company's pipelines and wellheads since last October will only get worse.

The two-page letter,sent to the Dawson Creek Daily News and released by the RCMP on Thursday, promises there will be no attacks beforethat deadline.

"You have three months to convince the residents here and the general public that you will commit to this program, meaning that all action against you will cease for three months from the time of this note," said the letter.

"We can all have a summer vacation, including your security personnel and the RCMP, who have not helped you to date anyway."

Explosions meant to send a message

The note called thesix explosions, which began last October and included two this month, as "minor" and "fully controlled." It said the attacks are meant to send a message aimed directly at EnCana.

"To let you know that you are indeed vulnerable, can be rendered helpless despite your mega-funds, your political influence, craftiness and deceit in which you trusted," it said.

Another letter surfaced last October just before the first of three explosions. That note called Calgary-based EnCana and other oil and gas companies "terrorists" and demanded they shut down immediately.

The latest letter doesn't specify the exact area EnCana must leave, but does mention the company's "fancy gas plant" at nearby Kelly Lake.

RCMP Sgt. Tim Shields said the letter has increased anxiety among the townspeople, who just want the bomber caught.

"This letter would be considered by many within the community to be a form of blackmail, and it has definitely ratcheted up the level of fear within the community," he said.

Bomber likely a local

Shields said policebelieve the person responsible is a local residentwho knows the back roads very well and would have been missing from home in the early-morning hours of July 1 and July 4 when the last two explosions occurred.

Mounties have tried to speak to a "handful" of residents who have surfaced as "people of interest," but they have not co-operated with police, Shields said.

The RCMP's anti-terrorism unit has been investigating the bombings, but so far no one has been charged.

The letter also appears to reference recent complaints by locals of heavy-handed tactics by RCMP investigators. At least two residents have hired a lawyer with the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, demanding police stop what they call harassment and intimidation.

The note demands that police allow residents to talk about their concerns aboutoil and gas development "unmolested by any further interrogations and/or investigations so that they can speak their minds without reprisal."

After the bombings began, some locals admitted they had concerns about the region's booming oilpatch, despite EnCana's insistence that it has a good relationship with residents in the area.