British Columbia

Following boyfriend's guilty plea, Ashley Simpson's family visits site where her remains were found in 2021

Ashley Simpson, 32, disappeared from a rural property near Salmon Arm, B.C., in 2016. Her family flew out from Ontario to search for her, but to no avail. In 2021, investigators found her remains in a wooded area outside Salmon Arm.

Parents praise investigators who found 32-year-old's body; Derek Favell pleaded guilty to murder early Monday

A man wearing a police uniform points down and to the left as two other people look to where he is pointing
RCMP Sgt. Eric Page showed Ashley Simpson's family where her remains were found by investigators in 2021, on Monday, Oct. 30, 2023. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

The family of a woman killed in 2016 paid a visit Monday to the area in B.C.'s Shuswap region where her remains were found five years after she went missing.

The visit came after Derek Favell pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the death of Ashley Simpson. 

In 2016, 32-year-old Simpson disappeared from a rural property near Salmon Arm — a southern Interior community around 75 kilometres east of Kamloops, B.C. — where she was living with Favell, her boyfriend at the time. 

John Simpson says his daughter planned to hitchhike home to St. Catharines, Ont., but never made it.

Simpson and other family members travelled to B.C. to search for Ashley, but to no avail. 

Family visits site where Ashley Simpson's remains were found in 2021

1 year ago
Duration 2:08
Seven years after a woman vanished in BC's Shuswap region, her former boyfriend has pleaded guilty to murdering her.Ashley Simpson disappeared in 2016- her remains were found several years later. As Brady Strachan reports, her father visited the spot she was discovered after today's plea.

In 2021, police announced a tip had led investigators to Ashley's remains, which were located in a rural area near Salmon Arm.

Investigators flew to Ontario to deliver the news to her family.

Simpson said he knew Ashley wasn't coming home alive when police gave him her rings. 

"But we knew that they'd found her, so she [would] be coming home," he told CBC News.

"That's key for us, to get our daughter home and to have her with us."

Favell was later charged with second-degree murder.

On Monday, Sgt. Eric Page, who led the forensic team that found Ashley, took the Simpsons through a wooded area to the spot where her remains were found. 

He said that his team began its search by walking the periphery of the road. 

A wooded area, with debris on the ground.
The area just outside Salmon Arm, B.C., where Ashley Simpson's remains were found in 2021. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

A dog handler followed as a police dog ran down to where the remains would soon be found, Page added. 

"I don't know if the movement of the ground had kind of stirred up enough scent or what," Page said. 

"It was kind of a simultaneous discovery. I think we all kind of noticed something right away."

Simpson said the area where she was found is much like an area they hiked in Ontario. 

"This is what Ashley likes, this is what we hiked all the time," he said. 

John and Cindy Simpson, Ashley's mother, praised investigators for their work. 

"Without them, it would have never happened," said Cindy Simpson, who praised an investigator named Kim. 

"She said, 'When we have nothing, I will be honest.' When she said, 'We're working on it,' I believed her."

Ashley Simpson is playing the guitar and looking at the camera
Ashley Simpson disappeared in 2016 shortly after she told her family in Ontario that she was planning on hitchhiking back to her home province. (Rose Simpson)

She said she tells other families searching for missing loved ones to believe police when they say they're working on it.

Ashley was one of five women reported missing in the North Okanagan-Shuswap region between 2016 and 2017, a fact that, along with her family's dedication, kept Ashley's story in the media over the years despite little word of progress from RCMP investigators. 

In 2021, RCMP said they believed Ashley's case was not connected to any of the other missing women in the region.

"We're not stopping," Simpson said. "We've got justice for Ashley. We'll see the sentencing and then we'll turn to the other people."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Brady Strachan

CBC Reporter

Brady Strachan is a CBC reporter based in Kelowna, B.C. Besides Kelowna, Strachan has covered stories for CBC News in Winnipeg, Brandon, Vancouver and internationally. Follow his tweets @BradyStrachan