Recently we started the I am missing campaign, he said. It s a social media-based platform where you can frame your profile photo with the I am missing Canadian maple leaf with the puzzle piece missing. I am missing Christmas, I am missing Easter, I am missing my daughter.
The template can help keep attention focused on missing loved ones.(Paul Trottier)
Trottier said the transition from winter to spring has amplified the length of time that his daughter has been gone. We ve passed through Christmas, we ve passed through Easter. Those were hard times for our family, those were times we spent together and, of course, we re short, we re missing, he said.
SASKATOON It s been more than four months since 22-year-old Mackenzie Trottier went missing. Her family has now organized a $20,000 reward in the hopes of bringing her home. We ve been looking for 130 days for our daughter. Over the past four months, it s been difficult for our family, and we re missing her and we would like to see her come home, Trottier s dad Paul told CTV News. On Dec. 22, Trottier was at her parents home and told them she would be back in time for Christmas. It was Dec. 24 when her family noticed her phone was dead. Her parents haven t heard from her since.
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Mackenzie Lee Trottier’s family is holding out hope for her safe return home.
She was last seen a few days before Christmas in Saskatoon, and the anxiety of not knowing where she is or whether she’s OK is taking its toll, said her father, Paul Trottier.
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“It’s a very stressful time,” he said.
Mackenzie, 22, was last seen by family in the 300 block of Trent Crescent on Dec. 21, 2020, according to a news release issued by city police on Jan. 15. Police and her family are concerned she may be in a vulnerable state, it said.