
A 26-year-old man from Calgary vanishes after visiting his mother. Days later, his truck is found burned up nearly 14 hours away in the wilds of British Columbia. What happened to Marshal Iwaasa and is his case possibly linked to more strange disappearances?
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Delia d'Ambra
Since he got out, bad things keep happening.
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He is coming after my family
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Delia d'Ambra
supplies last hi everyone, I'm Delia d' Ambra and on my podcast Counterclock, I don't just revisit cold cases, I reinvestigate them. Each season I turn back the clock on cases that have gone quiet over time and work to uncover what may have been missed. That means reexamining evidence, tracking down new leads, and speaking directly with the people closest to the case. This season, I'm investigating the Lane Bryant murders. Over the past year, I've spoken with law enforcement victims, loved ones and individuals who have never shared their perspectives. I followed leads from Chicago to Texas, reexamined timelines and taken a closer look at what was happening in Tinley park at the time and what may have been overlooked. But even after all of that, I keep coming back to the same question. How has this case not been solved? This season of Counterclock is not just about what happened inside that store. It's about what happened after and what it might take to finally get answers. Counterclock Season 8 is available now wherever you get your podcasts. Hi park enthusiasts. I'm your host, Delia d'. Ambra. And buckle up because the case I'm going to share with you today is one of those stories that will make you question everything you think you know about missing persons cases. It takes place in the Canadian provinces of Alberta and British Columbia, which are both known for having sprawling prairies, mountains, grasslands and forests that stretch for miles and miles. In late fall 2019, something truly confounding was discovered in the backcountry at the end of a logging road in B.C. that to this day remains extremely suspicious. The disappearance of 26 year old Marshall Iwasa is a case some of you listening might know about. It's been covered on TV programs and many true crime publications in North America. It's a missing persons case that I've received a lot of DMs about over the last few years, and I always knew that I would eventually cover the case on this show, but I wanted to make sure that I did as much digging as I could before presenting it here. Marshall's mother and sister, as well as many of his close friends, have poured everything they have into trying to find him and keeping his case in the public eye. Which is why I'm so thankful his loved one sat down with me for an interview. I want this platform to lift up cases like Marshall's whenever possible. So are you ready? Because this is the mysterious story of what happened to a young man with seemingly everything to live for, who vanished off the face of the earth with nothing but a string of suspicious clues in his wake. This is Park Predators.
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Sam.
Delia d'Ambra
On Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2019, a woman named Paige Fogan looked at her phone and saw that officers with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Pemberton, British Columbia were calling her. At the time, Paige and her husband were living in Hawaii, thousands of miles away from Canada. Coincidentally, though, her mom, Tammy Johnson, happened to be in Hawaii that week visiting, and together the two of them learned some puzzling news from police officers began by asking Paige if she'd spoken with her 26 year old brother, Marshall Iwasa, recently, but she told authorities that she hadn't. After answering a few more questions, Paige learned from investigators that some hikers had found Marshall's dark blue 2009 GMC Sierra pickup truck. A few days earlier, on Saturday, November 23, it was discovered burned up in a remote section of mountains just north of Pemberton, and he was nowhere to be found. Though this news was not what Paige expected to hear, she didn't immediately go into panic mode. She called around to her brother's friends and family members to see if anyone had heard from him, but no one had. His truck being found between 11 and 12 hours away from where he lived in Calgary, Alberta was unusual. But Paige's mind quickly jumped to a theory that made the most sense to her. You see, she knew that her brother worked in construction at the time, and sometimes he would do jobs on rigs that employers would have to fly their workers to, which often required Marshall to have to leave his truck parked somewhere for extended periods of time. So Page figured more than likely, his truck had just been stolen while he was away from it and found burned up in the forest because the thief didn't want to get caught. She even thought to herself how pissed her brother was going to be when he returned from work and discovered his vehicle was gone. But just as a precaution, in case that wasn't what was going on, Paige and her mom, Tammy, filed a missing persons report for Marshall with the Calgary police, since that was where he was from. The description that went out for him stated that he had brown eyes, a mustache, curly brown hair that went down to about his shoulders, and he weighed 170 pounds. He also had several distinct tattoos, and he was last seen wearing a gray beanie, black pants, a green hoodie, and red high top sneakers. The following day, Tammy got on a flight and jetted straight back to Canada so she could link up with authorities and figure out what exactly was being done to find her son. She and Paige told me during our interview that although investigators had informed them that Marshall's truck was discovered burned up on the 23rd, RCMP resources hadn't been able to get to it until two days later on November 25th. And that was due to the remote location it was found in. It also wasn't until after Tammy touched down that Marshall's family got the full picture of where his truck was and just how badly it had been burned. Turns out it wasn't like his vehicle had pulled off onto some well traveled mountain road. It was found way off the grid at the end of a logging road several hours into the backcountry. The area was a trailhead for the Brian Waddington Hut, which is the shelter for hikers that can house up to a few dozen people at a time. To get to it, you have to hike about two to three hours from the spot where Marshall's truck was found. And according to some of the coverage I saw, the spot isn't somewhere you would just plug into a GPS and easily navigate to. You would have had to have known where it was to even get out there. And as far as Marshall's family was aware, he had no prior experience driving there or familiarity with the region. And the truck itself was completely destroyed, like burned burned. The tires and paint had melted and the damage was so bad that police were only able to identify it from its VIN number. Scattered on the ground outside the truck, as well as amongst the charred remains, were things like clothing, toiletries, a cooler, a laptop, an Xbox and a PlayStation. Passports and several broken cell phones. Paige and Tammy told me that they later learned the passports belonged to Marshall. One was Outdated. And the other was current. Despite his family previously telling him that he probably shouldn't store such important documents in his truck, Marshall always did. And all of the cell phones were his too, but none of them were the device he was currently using. Page told me that the other phones were old ones that Marshall had tossed in his vehicle after breaking them. Apparently he had really bad luck when it came to electronics and he'd go through phones fairly regularly anyway. The RCMP spent the next few days collecting the items and searching the remote terrain around the truck with helicopters, divers and cadaver dogs, but no trace of Marshall turned up. Within a week, cold weather threatened investigators efforts and so authorities ended up having to suspend the search. They told Marshall's family they were not planning to remove the truck at that time. It was going to be left out in the open, unsecured, until the weather improved. While those things had been happening in the mountains, investigators in Alberta had been busy trying to piece together Marshall's last known movements. Tammy told me that throughout this time she was shocked and confused about what was going on. The last time she'd seen her son was six days before his truck was found, which would have been Sunday, Nov. 17. That night, around 8pm she said Marshall had left his apartment in Calgary and driven the roughly two and a half hour drive southeast to where she lived in Lethbridge. He'd arrived around 10:30pm and the two of them hung out for about half an hour. They sat at her table and he helped her set up her laptop. And then Marshall said he had to go because he wanted to swing by a storage unit he and Paige shared in Lethbridge. He explained to his mom that he wanted to pick something up there before heading back to Calgary. And by the way, him making this trip to see his mom on Sunday night wasn't strange or spur of the moment. You see Marshall coming to see Tammy that particular weekend had been something they discussed the previous weekend. She told me that originally she'd wanted to come up to his place on the 9th or 10th, but he told her not to bother because he was actually going to be driving down to Lethbridge the weekend of the 17th. According to Tammy, when Marshall departed her house on Sunday, it was around 11 o' clock at night. And the storage facility he said he was going to swing by was only like 15 or 20 minutes away from her place. According to Marshall's Sister Paige, on November 28, which would have been two days after she and Tammy were made aware that he was missing and five days after his truck was found. Investigators, some of Marshall's friends, and maybe a family member who Paige and Tammy had asked to join police went to the storage unit in Lethbridge to check things out. Despite the facility having cameras, by the time the police got there, the footage from the night Marshall had gone by had already been erased and overwritten. Page told me police poked around a little bit at that time, but because they didn't see anything overtly suspicious and because there was no video evidence for them to follow up on, investigators eventually left. From the outset, authorities admitted that the circumstances of Marshall's disappearance and where his truck was found were suspicious, but they didn't have any evidence indicating he was a victim of foul play. It seems investigators really wanted to determine if perhaps Marshall had chosen to walk away from his life for some reason or had things going on that had caused him to stop talking to his family. According to Tammy, right out of high school, her son had delayed attending college and instead started working in construction and roofing. After a few years of doing that, he'd decided higher education was something he did want to pursue. And by 2018, he'd enrolled in classes at a school in Calgary called the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology, which is also known by the acronym sait. He was studying computers and software development, but he always managed to find time to go outdoors. He was also passionate about exercising and spending time doing things like hiking. It seemed like when Marshall wasn't working or attending classes, he'd be in the gym or out on a trail. But when police looked into his school attendance records, they discovered Marshall wasn't actively enrolled in classes for the fall semester in 2019, which to them seemed like an indication that he had quit school but just hadn't told anyone in his family. When authorities spoke with Tammy about this, she said she'd been unaware her son was no longer enrolled at sait, but she didn't think that putting a pause on his education was as suspicious as police thought it was. She told me that detectives seemed convinced Marshall had intentionally lied to his family about not being in school that fall, with the implication being, at least how Tammy perceived it, that police were hinting to, well, if he could lie about that, that what else is he lying about? But Tammy told me she totally understood why her son chose to keep the fact that he wasn't going to continue pursuing school to himself. She doesn't think he was being dishonest. She just thinks that Marshall, whose natural disposition was to be a private person, would have broken the news to her and the rest of his family eventually. During her first conversation with authorities, Tammy was shocked to learn that investigators had already established a working theory of what they believed happened to her son. According to her, police said they didn't think Marshall was just missing. They believed he was dead by his own choice. Look, starting something new, especially a business, can be intimidating. You have to wear multiple hats and the number of tasks you have to juggle can get overwhelming pretty fast. Fortunately, we live in the day and age of Shopify. The platform acts as your built in business partner and simplifies all your tasks. It also acts as your own personal marketing team, creating email and social campaigns to reach customers wherever they're scrolling. Shopify powers millions of businesses worldwide, driving 10% of U.S. e commerce. From household names like the Audio Chuck Shop to creators just getting started. So start your business today with the industry's business Best business partner Shopify and start hearing. Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at shopify.com parkpredators go to shopify.com parkpredators that's shopify.com parkpredators. Tammy told me that from the get go, investigators indic that they thought the most likely scenario was that Marshall had died by suicide. However, that scenario just didn't make sense to her or anyone else in his immediate family. Sure, it was obvious from what police had gathered up to that point that Marshall was not planning to return to school. But everything else surrounding his disappearance didn't amount to him necessarily wanting to take his own life. For example, his family learned that he'd filled a prescription a few days before he disappeared, and that made them wonder, why would he do that if he didn't intend to keep living? Not to mention, his body had not been found with his truck or anywhere in the vicinity of it, so how could that be? And speaking of the vehicle's location, Tammy and Paige couldn't understand why Marshall's truck was found so far from where he lived in Calgary and where he'd last been seen in Lethbridge. In addition to all those puzzling details, Paige and Tammy later saw pictures that the RCMP had taken of the truck scene. But what was in those images looked very different than what had been captured in the images that the hikers who first found the truck took. According to Page, it appeared that after the hikers discovered Marshall's vehicle on November 23, some of the stuff in the truck and on the ground around it had been moved or repositioned before the RCMP got to the scene on November 25. One source I found stated that the steering column in the truck had been taken after the hikers snapped their photos because it was there when that group was there. But it was gone by the time police photographed the scene. One of the hikers who found the truck posted about it online and told CTV News that to him, the whole discovery felt like a crime scene. He explained that when they came across Marshall's truck, the fire still smelled fresh and the extent of the damage to the vehicle was jarring. On top of that, no one else other than his hiking group had formally registered to be at the Brian Waddington Hut around that time. Which I guess is why this hiker thought it was odd to see the truck there, because if it did belong to another visitor, it really shouldn't have been there. Page thought the discrepancy between the hiker's photos and what the RCMP had found at this scene was weird as well. But to this day, no one can account for why the items on the ground at the fire scene were moved. The discrepancy suggests that the items were repositioned before police got to the truck. But by whom and why is unclear. From what police later said, the items being moved could have been the result of another visitor, unaware of Marshall's case, just going through the debris because they were curious. In that scenario, police asked anyone who might have been up in the remote area and come across the truck between November 23rd and 25th to contact them. But I don't think anyone did. What I can say is that neither Paige nor Tammy bought police's theory that Marshall had died by suicide. So they set out on their own mission to determine what could have happened to him, the family did the math and realized that in order for his truck to have ended up in the backcountry of British Columbia, some 14 hours northwest of Lethbridge, whoever was driving it would have had to stop for fuel at least a few times to complete the journey. Marshall's bank history showed no transactions or activity after he vanished on the 17th. So I imagine his family figured if he was the one who'd made the trip, he must have paid for fuel and cash. So Tammy and one of her friends drove to as many gas stations as they could along the routes between Alberta and Pemberton and inquired about surveillance footage. But according to Tammy, the stores told them that the police would have to be the ones to come by and request the tapes. So Tammy wrote down all the places that they went to, as well as the managers names, and asked them not to delete any footage from their systems for on or after November 18th. After that, she gave all that information she'd written down to the police. But to this day, she has no idea if investigators ever went to those locations and looked for surveillance footage. The family also revisited the storage facility in Lethbridge that Marshall had said he was going to on the night he disappeared. When Tammy and Paige had initially gone there with a Lethbridge police investigator in early December 2019, they hadn't observed anything out of the ordinary or missing from the unit. But a few weeks after that, when a private investigator the family had hired interviewed an employee who worked at that facility, Paige and Tammy learned for the first time that the entry code specifically assigned to Marshall and Paige's unit that allowed them inside the property had been punched in numerous times after 11pm on Sunday night and throughout the early morning hours of Monday, November 18th. However, every time the code had been entered, the person punching it in was denied entry, but not because the code was being mispunched, but because, according to Page, the facility locked customers out between the hours of 11pm and 6am Paige told me that when her and her brother first rented their storage unit in 2014, the facility was owned by someone that allowed customers 24.7access so long as they used their specific entry code. However, she said that after 2014, the facility had been bought and sold several times by different owners. So she thinks that at some point unbeknownst to Marshall, the person that owned it in 2019 had set up a system where even if you had your user specific code and punched it in, you couldn't physically get into the building between the hours of 11pm and 6am so she suspects that all those failed entry code attempts at the facility that occurred after 11pm on Sunday was Marshall trying to get in and not realizing the facility was locked to all customers. The storage company's records showed that after 6am the siblings entry code finally worked and it appeared it wasn't used again until Marshall reportedly locked up and left around 8.30am, which meant he'd spent at least two hours at the facility. But what no one to this day knows is why he was there. We also don't know what he was doing between 11pm and 6am while he was unable to get in. He could have been sitting in the parking lot, frustrated about his code not working. He could have driven somewhere else, gone to a store. Nobody knows. It's just a big gap in time that no one has been able to fill. And Paige has wondered a lot about that window of Marshall's time too. Which is why shortly after her family learned the information about Marshall using his access code so many times, she specifically asked Lethbridge police to visit the shops and stores surrounding the facility to check for surveillance video. But according to her, officials only looked for footage at a nearby Tim Hortons coffee shop and possibly a McDonald's, and that was too grainy to make out if Marshall or his vehicle had passed by. Page further suggested police go by a Walmart that was nearby, as well as other convenience stores, but for unknown reasons, police did not check those places as far as Paige is aware. But in my opinion, I think figuring out where Marshall was in the time he was waiting to get into the storage unit could be critical in this case. My questions are, did he go somewhere to meet up with someone during that time? Did someone come there to meet him? Was it even really him who used the entry code at 6am to get into the unit? There are so many questions that I feel could be answered if we had more context. One huge help would have been if authorities could have tracked his cell phone. But Paige told me that to this day, her brother's Samsung Galaxy mobile device, as well as his school issued laptop, contact lenses, contact solution glasses, backpack and wallet have never been found. None of that stuff was with his burned out truck or in his apartment. And it's also unclear what happened to the keys to his truck. Page surmised that those items could have been incinerated in the fire, but she's not 100% sure because no evidence of them has ever been found. By the end of December 2019, all aspects of the investigation, including the vehicle fire, were officially transferred to the Lethbridge Police Service, since that was the jurisdiction Marshall was last seen alive in. In early January 2020, on what would have been Marshall's 27th birthday, his family and friends held a candlelight vigil for him at his former high school in Lethbridge. About two weeks later, on January 17, Tammy and Paige visited Marshall's apartment in Calgary to clear out his belongings. And while they were there, Paige saw something that gave her pause. Paige observed that her Brother's Xbox and PlayStation gaming consoles were set up in his apartment and still logged into his user profile. That struck her as odd because she remembered the pictures that the hikers who'd found Marshall's truck had taken, and there were burned remains of PlayStation and Xbox consoles found at the scene. And since she was staring at Marshall's Xbox and PlayStation sitting perfectly fine at his apartment, she and her mom realized that the burned consoles found in the ashes of the truck fire were not the ones that belonged to Marshall. To make things even more suspicious, people who'd been friends with him on Snapchat contacted Tammy and Paige a few weeks later, claiming that some messages they'd sent to his account after he disappeared had been opened. Now, I'm not a Snapchat user, but apparently on the app, there's a feature where it notifies a sender if the person they sent a message to opened it or not. And according to Paige, there were several folks who told her family that someone accessing her brother's profile had opened messages in the weeks after he vanished. Now, when Tammy and Paige took this information to police, they were expecting authorities to get right on it. But investigators told the family that because the case wasn't classified as a criminal matter, Page believes they didn't have enough probable cause to get a search warrant for Marshall's phone or his Gmail account or his social media accounts. So the police just didn't look into it. And then the world sort of paused for everyone, because as we all know, the spring of 2020 is when the COVID 19 pandemic hit. And that had some real world impacts on Marshall's case. For example, Tammy told Global News that despite stay at home orders going into effect, she was hopeful that Marshall's loved ones and their supporters could still try to find ways to keep momentum in the case going and make sure people didn't forget about him being missy. In May 2020, after the snow melted, Lethbridge police once again searched the area where Marshall's truck had been found, but nothing new surfaced. A month later, in late June, some of the people from the private investigation firm the family had hired visited the remote location in British Columbia alongside authorities. Police did their arson investigation first. Then they let the PI folks do their thing. When some of the PIs looked through the debris, they realized that officers with the police service who'd just been at the site had not gone through it very carefully, especially with the debris that was in the truck's floor pans. When the PIs went through those sections of the vehicle, they discovered that entire pieces of fire debris were still intact. And most ominous of all, they found a Zippo lighter next to where the driver's seat should have been, which seemed like a pretty big clue that authorities had missed. Either way, though, both sets of investigators took samples and notes and began preparing their final reports about what could have caused the fire. But the results of those parallel investigations were going to take some time. So in July, while everyone was waiting, Marshall's family decided they wanted to go to the remote trailhead. A team that had proper 4x4 vehicles volunteered to take Tammy, Paige and some other relatives up there. Paige told me that the terrain was so remote and rugged, it was even difficult for the trained professionals to navigate through. For example, the group had to drive through creeks, cross over some rocks, and basically go all the way to the end of where you could drive just to find the spot. And the further and further the group journeyed, the more Tammy said she became convinced that her son had not been the person to drive his truck up there. She knew that Marshall had just recently paid off his vehicle. So it didn't make any sense to her why he would have gone so far into the wilderness where he likely would have torn it up. After that trip. And by the end of summer 2020, results from both the police's arson investigation and the PI firm's investigation came in. Lethbridge police's report came back as inconclusive as to whether an arson had occurred. However, the private investigators determined that Marshall's truck had been intentionally set on fire, and the point of origin for the blaze was from the passenger seat area. The PIs also concluded that the Zippo lighter that had been found near where the driver's seat was supposed to be was what had been used to set the fire. When the family's investigators presented their findings to the police, authorities didn't change their minds. They weren't going to call the vehicle fire and arson without more proof, and they weren't going to say Marshall was a victim of foul play either, because up until that point, they hadn't found any clear evidence pointing to him being dead, let alone murdered. So without a criminal element, Marshall's case remained a missing persons investigation. Lethbridge police had previously said in a media release, quote. In examining Iwasa's personal affairs in the months leading up to his disappearance, including interviews with close friends, as well as his financial, medical and social media activity, There is evidence to suggest he was experiencing stress in his life and had become withdrawn, end quote. Which is a statement to me that seems to be subtly suggesting that whatever happened to Marshall was a result of his own doing. But that was not a theory his family was willing to get on board with. Towards the end of 2020, Tammy and Paige launched an online petition to have Marshall's case reclassified as criminal. They specifically wanted authorities to test items that had been found at the fire scene and storage unit. For fingerprints and DNA. They also wanted police to more thoroughly search the storage facility and surrounding locations, as well as work more collaboratively with the family's private investigators. The petition garnered more than 6,000 signatures, but when Tammy and Paige took it to Lethbridge, police investigators told them it would have no effect on the case and nothing would change because there was still no evidence that suggested the matter was criminal in nature or that Marshall was dead. But the family pushed forward anyway and saw the number of people supporting them increase on a Facebook page they'd created to keep the case in the limelight. The page, Find Marshall Iwasa, was created just days after he disappeared, and it quickly grew to more than 16,000 members and people were on there sharing and posting and reposting about the case on a regular basis. It's still active today and remains a space where relatives post updates about the investigation and where members offer support or discuss possible theories. And speaking of theories, there have been a lot of those. According to my interview with Tammy, she said that Marshall had never been in trouble with the law or arrested for any kind of crime, just traffic related stuff. So any suggestion that he might have been tied up with drugs or targeted by people associated with drugs is a theory that just never held water for her. Like I said, she said he'd gotten a few traffic tickets in life, but other than that, his record was clean. She told me that to her knowledge, he was never into illicit drugs or suffered from an addiction. The only thing he engaged in from time to time was cannabis use. Both her and Paige said that even Lethbridge police confirmed they didn't suspect Marshall was part of an illicit drug scene or associated with illicit drug use. And the family seemingly ruled out a personal motive too. As far as Tammy and Paige are aware, Marshall wasn't dating anyone at the time of his disappearance and he didn't have anyone who was an archenemy or held a grudge against him. Tammy told me that all of the girls he'd dated prior to November 2019 were still friendly with him, and based on what Paige saw people saying online about her brother, it didn't appear that anyone had beef with him. The family also looked into whether someone from Marshall's work or social life could have had it out for him, but there was nothing there either. Paige told me that it was unreal how many people over the years, including folks Marshall worked with or met at the gym, praised him for being such a nice person and expressed their sadness about his disappearance. When Tammy and Paige spoke with the family who'd been renting their basement apartment to Marshall in Calgary. Those folks told them that nothing seemed amiss with him on the Sunday afternoon before he left for Tammy's. They said he'd mostly puttered around the house, tidied up, and done a load of laundry before heading to Lethbridge. Tammy told me that she knows the landlords physically laid eyes on Marshall that day because the way his living space was laid out in their home, he would have had to bring his laundry up to the main floor to use their machines, which is how they were able to know as much about his activities that afternoon as they did. And from what I gathered after reading so much coverage about this case, it doesn't appear Marshall had any visitors Sunday afternoon or that he'd left to go anywhere during that time. I specifically asked Tammy and Paige if they ever suspected the homeowners he rented from might have been involved in his disappearance. But Tammy told me no. She personally doesn't think that's the case. She said that Marshall had found his landlords online, and they were a very nice family who really liked him. So, with those potential avenues of investigation tentatively ruled out, the family has stayed in this state of limbo about what they think happened or what they think makes the most sense. Paige told me that she's never been able to land on just one theory. She said there's so much about her brother's disappearance that doesn't make sense to her, but she thinks there's definitely credible evidence that points to something sinister. However, there's also a part of her that wonders if maybe he is still alive out there somewhere and just chose to start over. If Marshall did do that, he's kept a pretty low profile, because after his disappearance, authorities have gone as far as to check with officials at the United States border and confirmed Marshall had never legally crossed him voluntarily. Choosing to walk away from his life and family is a difficult suggestion for Paige to entertain because that would mean that during all this time, Marshall has never reached out to anyone in his family, including her. Tammy told me Paige is the closest person to Marshall. Ever since they were little, the siblings were extremely tight. Tammy divorced her kid's father when Marshall was young, and after that, Marshall and Paige were inseparable. As the siblings grew into adults, they remained close and made sure to spend holidays, birthdays, and family gatherings together. Tammy told me that there is no one closer to Marshall than Paige, and no one else knows him better than she does. During our interview, Paige told me that she's confident that if her brother is dead. He's not in the landscape near where his truck was found because authorities thoroughly searched that area back in 2019 and didn't find him. But she also doesn't think the location should never be searched again because she told me that if police wanted to go back out there today and look for Marshall, she'd join them in a heartbeat. Tammy has a similar mindset. She's confident her son didn't die by suicide and that he didn't drive his truck to British Columbia. But she has no idea where he could be now or who he might have come across after he left her house. Over the years, some reported sightings of Marshall have come to police, but the tips were reportedly checked out and none of those people ended up being him. Tammy told me she's hopeful that one day her son will be found and that Lethbridge police will find a way to reclassify his case so it can be pursued as a criminal matter. But in my opinion, the more time passes, the less and less I think authorities have to work with. According to the coverage I found, the charred carcass of Marshall's truck stayed put for several years after 2019. However, in 2023, a man who was a member of an organization called the Varsity Outdoor Club personally cut it up and towed it out of the woods. After removing it, he took it to a landfill and now it's gone for good. He told Bridge City News the reason he disassembled it and got it out of the area was because he had serious concerns about it impacting the environment. It doesn't appear police did anything to stop this guy or oversee his efforts to make sure the truck was preserved. Disappointingly, in the past few years, things haven't changed much in Marshall's case. Tammy and Paige continue to try and keep his name in the spotlight and hold out hope that updates will calm for them. So many questions remain unanswered, like, for example, why did Marshall go to the storage unit on the night of the 17th? What was in there that seemed to be such a priority for him? Like I said earlier, according to Paige, she and her brother began renting their unit in 2014. At that time, she'd moved with her husband to Hawaii, and Marshall had also been in the process of moving. So they decided they would go in on the rental together and use the space to keep stuff that was important to each of them. Paige told me she had a bunch of totes filled with books in there, and Marshall had some tools and knickknacks there. Were also dishes, pictures, games, and a chest of family heirlooms. Basically just stuff neither of them wanted in their homes, but they weren't necessarily ready to get rid of. And in terms of how their unit was organized, Paige said it was packed tightly, like full to the brim. For example, she said if you wanted to get to something that was maybe in the back of it, you'd have to drag everything out to access it. Which, to her and her mom, could be one explanation as to why Marshall seemingly stayed at the facility from around 6am until 8:30am they wonder if maybe during that roughly two and a half hours or so, he was trying to get to something he wanted that was in the back of the unit. Of course, they don't know for sure what exactly he was doing there or what he was after, but Tammy told me that it would have been in Marshall's nature to dig and search for as long as he needed to until he found what he'd come for. What's super interesting to me, though, is that during Paige and Tammy's first visit to the storage unit with Lethbridge Police in December 2019, and then again about a year later when the family cleared it out for good, Paige said nothing was missing. She said she inventoried every single item she and Marshall kept in there, and nothing was gone. On top of that, all of her and Marshall's camping gear, like their Axe, mattress, coolers, tent, all that stuff was still sitting there, which she's convinced contradicts suggestions she's seen online that claim her brother might have planned to go camping in British Columbia on his own. To her, if that were the case and he was planning to go off on his own, then it doesn't make sense why he would have left all their camping gear behind. Part of me wonders if maybe Marshall went to the storage unit to retrieve something related to his studies in computer sciences or interest in programming. Page told Peak News magazine that prior to Marshall vanishing, he'd made comments about how getting a job in his field didn't always come down to having a sparkling resume or education. It was more about who you knew. Page mentioned in our interview that prior to Marshall's disappearance, he'd logged around 600 hours building something on the online game distribution and storefront called Steam. She doesn't know exactly what he was designing there, but it had consumed a lot of his time and was something he'd been doing on the day he went to see his mom. I'm not sure if that project could be related to his disappearance or movements around the time he vanished. But if it isn't, Paige just believes it further proves that her brother didn't plan to walk away from his life. If he'd worked so hard on something like this self designed game, he wouldn't have just up and disappeared without finishing it. To add even more frustration to this case, it was unclear for at least a little while which law enforcement agency was in charge of things. For example, in mid-2024, Peak News magazine learned from a staff sergeant with the RCMP that Lethbridge police were still in charge of the investigation. But the very same day, a spokesperson for Lethbridge police told the magazine that their agency no longer had jurisdiction over the case and that the entire file had been transferred to the RCMP in Pemberton. After several months of back and forth with the newspaper, the RCMP confirmed they were involved in the investigation. However, the case file from Lethbridge Police had yet to arrive in Pemberton. As it stands today, the Lethbridge Police Service remains the lead agency over Marshall's case, with the RCMP assisting. But I'm sorry, it's hard to have a ton of confidence in anyone at this point. Because here's the thing. It's not just the circumstances of Marshall's suspicious disappearance that are strange to me. It's what's been happening in parts of British Columbia since he vanished that's made it impossible for me to look away from this story. His mom Tammy told me that posters in B.C. featuring Marshall's picture and information about where to send tips have been taken down by unknown people. And a mysterious clue found amongst the debris of his truck fire that his family has never been able to make sense of has caused many people to wonder if his disappearance is connected to another young man who went missing in the wilds of Pemberton in late November 2019. That investigation is what I'll be diving into next week in an episode of Park Predators titled the Thread. Stay tuned. Park Predators is an Audio Chuck production. You can view a list of all the source material for this episode on our website parkpredators.com and you can also follow park predators on Instagram arcpredators. I think Chuck would approve.
Host: Delia D’Ambra
Date: June 2, 2026
In “The Wilderness,” investigative journalist Delia D’Ambra explores the unsolved disappearance of Marshall Iwasa, a 26-year-old man who vanished in November 2019 amid the rugged landscapes of Alberta and British Columbia. Delia methodically breaks down the case, highlights the searching and ongoing efforts of Marshall’s family, and questions the inconsistencies, investigative stumbles and haunting theories that have left this case open, mysterious, and deeply troubling.
“This is the mysterious story of what happened to a young man with seemingly everything to live for, who vanished off the face of the earth with nothing but a string of suspicious clues in his wake.” (02:18)
“From the get go, investigators...thought the most likely scenario was that Marshall had died by suicide. However, that scenario just didn’t make sense to [his family].” (23:32)
Discrepancies in the truck scene:
SnapChat messages read after his disappearance, hinting that someone accessed his account post-incident, but police do not obtain warrants to investigate further. (47:34)
Who moved the truck to such an isolated spot? Family and PI sources find the terrain extremely difficult; unlikely that Marshall, who loved and valued his truck, would have driven it out to such a place himself. (52:00)
The arson debate:
Theories Explored:
Quotes:
“There's so much about her brother's disappearance that doesn't make sense to her, but she thinks there's definitely credible evidence that points to something sinister. However, there's also a part of her that wonders if maybe he is still alive out there somewhere and just chose to start over.” (1:01:02)
“Investigators told them it would have no effect on the case and nothing would change because there was still no evidence that suggested the matter was criminal in nature or that Marshall was dead.” (1:00:07)
Delia’s tone remains empathetic, thorough, and slightly critical, especially of law enforcement’s apparent lack of urgency and transparency. The episode is investigative and emotionally charged, highlighting both the heartbreak and resilience of Marshall’s family.
The episode closes by emphasizing how unresolved and fractious the investigation remains. Delia teases connections to other regional disappearances and promises to continue following the threads next week.
For Marshall’s family, the search for answers and justice continues—as does their hope.