Advertisement

Search continues for Savoura president, teen son now missing for one week

Francois Legault, right, chats with Biologico organic tomato greenhouse owner Stephane Roy during an election campaign stop in Saint-Sophie, Que., Thursday, August 16, 2012. Search and rescue teams will continue their search Wednesday for Quebec businessman Roy and his teenage son who've been missing since last week after failing to return from a fishing trip in northern Quebec. Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press

Search and rescue teams focused on a narrowed zone Wednesday in their search for a missing Quebec businessman and his teen son who haven’t been heard from in a week.

Businessman Stéphane Roy and his 14-year-old son Justin were reported missing after failing to return home from a fishing trip as planned last Wednesday aboard his Robinson R44 helicopter.

Roy is the founder and owner of Les Serres Sagami Inc., which produces greenhouse-grown tomatoes and other produce under the Sagami and Savoura brands.

READ MORE: Helicopter with Savoura president and his son goes missing in northern Quebec

Breaking news from Canada and around the world sent to your email, as it happens.

Capt. Trevor Reid of the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Trenton, Ont., said a 4,000-square-kilometre area northwest of Mont-Tremblant, Que., was targeted based on cellular phone data obtained by Quebec provincial police.

Story continues below advertisement

Initially the search area — forested, rocky terrain with several lakes — was about 20,000 square kilometres.

READ MORE: Search continues in Quebec’s Laurentians region for missing Savoura president and his son

The pair were reported missing last Thursday after they didn’t return from a chalet in Lac-De la Bidière, a remote area in the upper Laurentians regions west of La Tuque, Que.

Griffon helicopters, a Canadian Coast Guard chopper and the Quebec provincial police helicopter were joined by two Hercules aircraft Wednesday.

“We are still searching. The weather today is posing a bit of a challenge. We’ve had some storms moving through the region,” Reid said, adding flights were being adjusted as necessary to ensure searches continue without putting teams at risk.

Reid said the military has been in close contact with the family, which has been conducting its own searches with the help of private civilian helicopters for the past week.

On Wednesday, the mayor of Roy’s hometown, Ste-Sophie, Que., called for the federal government and surrounding municipalities to be on standby to help maintain the search for the pair.

Mayor Louise Gallant said the entire community is supporting the Roy family.

Sponsored content

AdChoices