in Winnipeg, Manitoba
Assault In 2014, on the night of Friday, November 7, 16-year-old Harper was in the South Broadway area of Winnipeg with friends. They were celebrating the completion of mid-term exams. Around midnight, Harper became separated from her friends and was approached by two young men. The men beat and sexually assaulted Harper underneath a bridge before leaving her submerged in the near-freezing
Assiniboine River. Harper initially had no pulse upon reaching the hospital
Investigation and charges Although it is common for sexual assault victims to remain unidentified by Canadian police and media, Harper's parents and the investigating authorities made the unusual decision to release Rinelle Harper's name to the public, with the objective of helping find new leads in the case quickly. A subsequent police press conference stated that public response to the release of Harper's name had been "tremendous". Investigators examined the possibility that Harper's assault was related to the disappearance and murder of First Nations teenager
Tina Fontaine, whose body had been discovered in a river only weeks before, but found no information suggesting the two crimes were linked.
Aftermath On November 20, 2014, Harper and her family met with Sean Vincent, one of the construction workers who had found Harper and helped get her to the hospital. The family expressed their thanks by giving Vincent a soapstone bear sculpture and a painting from the Garden Hill First Nation. == Calls for national inquiry ==