Saturday 14 November 2020

More than 20 chainsaws stolen from Hanwell business while Dragons like pitch about small-town New Brunswick

https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies

CBC posted Cyber Stalker DeanRoger Ray's claim
Calling the number and reporting David Amos He was in the area at the time
 
I replied
Say Hey to your buddies in the RCMP for me
 
 
 
 
 
 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/more-than-20-chainsaws-stolen-from-hanwell-business-1.5802539

 

More than 20 chainsaws stolen from Hanwell business

RCMP investigate late-night break-in on Oct. 19

CBC News · Posted: Nov 14, 2020 5:06 PM AT


RCMP are looking for information after more than 20 chainsaws were stolen from a business in Hanwell, N.B., in October. (Shutterstock / Denis Tabler)

RCMP are investigating after more than 20 chainsaws were stolen from a Hanwell, N.B., business.

The theft occurred following a break-in at a business on Route 640 during the late-night hours of Oct. 19 and early morning the following day.

An individual stole an orange Arbortec gear bag, according to a news release. The chainsaws are Husqvarna 550XP, Husqvarna 372XP and Stihl MS 880.

The RCMP say video surveillance shows a person of interest wearing a jacket and ball cap.

Keswick RCMP asks anyone with information to call 506-575-6200. Anonymous tips can be provided through Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

 

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices

  

 

12 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.

 



David Stairs
who the heck is overseeing these investigations...what a useless news story...these items will be long gone...someone needs to launch an investigation into the Mounties mishandling of these situations....and there follow-up practices...
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @David Stairs: Methinks Cpl Mark Blakely of Major Crimes is doubt is overseeing this N'esy Pas?
 









Terry Tibbs
The reporting of a theft, of small portable items, 5 days short of a month later has a very limited value to anybody.
 
 
David Amos
Content disabled  
Reply to @Terry Tibbs: Methinks you have developed quite a diverse fan club of sheople who revel with your every word one way or the other. There is no need for me to add my two bits to the circus concerned about a wicked little virus that can go through the masks like mosquito through a chain link fence and hop in any vehicle and cruise around the province N'esy Pas?









 
Kevin Archibald  
Check in the area anyone with an unusually large pile of firewood that needs cut and split.

Odd that people steal something like this because it takes manual labor to operate, and most thieves aren't real ambitious.....hahaha 


David Amos
Reply to @Kevin Archibald: What is so funny?

How many people do you know would buy a cheap brand new chainsaw??

How would you like to be the people who owned the shop that was ripped off???
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Kevin Archibald: More importantly scroll down and ask yourself how you would feel about being falsely accused as being the thief of the chainsaws?
 










Ben Haroldson
Timely reporting of that crime. We'll get em for sure. Probably an inside job.
 
 
Jos Allaire
Reply to @Ben Haroldson: "Probably an inside job." - How so?
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Ben Haroldson: i doubt it on both counts
 
 
DeanRoger Ray
Reply to @David Amos: Calling the number and reporting David Amos. He was in the area at the time.
 
 
DeanRoger Ray
Content disabled 
Reply to @David Amos: Plus David wears a Red Sox cap on occasion so he fits the profile...
 
 
David Amos
Content disabled 
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: Say Hey to your buddies in the RCMP for me 
 
 
DeanRoger Ray
Reply to @David Amos: Called both numbers and spoke about you.
 
 
DeanRoger Ray
Reply to @David Amos: You’ll be going to the slammer soon pal!
 
 
DeanRoger Ray
Content disabled 
Reply to @David Amos: Wouldn’t it be poetic justice if you got to press the license plate that ends up on ol’ Panhead (wherever it is now...hehe)
 
 
David Amos
Content disabled 
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: You said earlier

'I don’t actually have any buddies in the RCMP. But I’m a huge fan of Blakely, Lynch, and good ‘Ol Sgt Moe though."
 
 
David Amos
Content disabled 
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: Methinks anyone who bothered to read a recent article about the actions of your pal Cpl Blakely of the Major Crimes Unit then they would know its legal for the cops to lie about investigating who stole my Panhead etc in 2007 N'esy Pas?
 
 
David Amos
Content disabled 
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: Methinks everybody who has been paying attention to your recent efforts to jerk my chain must realize you are a minor shill for the RCMP who spreads the bs for them on a daily basis lately to keep yourself from being arrested N'esy Pas? 
 

DeanRoger Ray
Content disabled 
Reply to @David Amos: No one stole your bike. You tried to get around insurance laws by using a phony address to obtain tags in NH (which at the time did not require insurance). When it was determined that you had years worth of outstanding Road Tax in that state your bike was impounded and later sold at auction. Stop omitting facts sir.
 
 
DeanRoger Ray
Content disabled 
Reply to @David Amos: I would have had to commit a crime to be eligible for arrest. Calling bs on you is not a crime anywhere outside of your own mind.
 
 
David Amos
Content disabled 
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: Methinks you cyber harassment of my daughters within the last couple of days won't win you many more pals within the RCMP N'esy Pas?
 
 
David Amos
Content disabled 
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: BS The RCMP and I know where my Panhead is
 
 
David Amos
Content disabled 
Reply to @David Amos: BTW Methinks you should change your ID again Everybody knows that you are not who you claim to be today I trust that many cops know why you used to pretend to be me N'esy Pas?  
 

 

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/dragons-den-rexton-business-1.5801142 

 

Pitching small-town New Brunswick to the Dragons

Rexton entrepreneur leverages love of his hometown in six-figure deal with investors

 

Marie Sutherland · CBC News · Posted: Nov 14, 2020 8:00 AM AT

 

 

Sawyer Hannay's Rexton-based business got a $150,000 boost after his successful pitch to the investors on Dragons' Den. (Submitted by Sawyer Hannay)

You don't have to sell the charms of small-town New Brunswick to Sawyer Hannay.

But Hannay, who was born and raised in the tiny village of Rexton, is pretty good at selling the charms of small-town New Brunswick to the world. And on Thursday night, that earned his Rexton-based business, Country Liberty, a $150,000 vote of confidence from the business titans on Dragons' Den.

Hannay, 28, started his business — a line of casual, outdoors-inspired clothing — when he was still in university. He had already travelled extensively, having been drafted to the NHL for the Vancouver Canucks, and the more he travelled, the more he realized what a gem his hometown was.

"I grew really proud of the place I was from," he said. "I wanted to represent that pride somehow, and I knew the easiest way to do that was to wear it."

He started Country Liberty as a "passion project," ordering 12 T-shirts and putting the Country Liberty logo on them.

"All I was hoping for was to make my money back on the shirts," he said. "But it just took off from there."

Sawyer Hannay's Rexton-based business got a $150,000 boost after his successful pitch to the investors on Dragons' Den. (Submitted by Sawyer Hannay)

You don't have to sell the charms of small-town New Brunswick to Sawyer Hannay.

But Hannay, who was born and raised in the tiny village of Rexton, is pretty good at selling the charms of small-town New Brunswick to the world. And on Thursday night, that earned his Rexton-based business, Country Liberty, a $150,000 vote of confidence from the business titans on Dragons' Den.

Hannay, 28, started his business — a line of casual, outdoors-inspired clothing — when he was still in university. He had already travelled extensively, having been drafted to the NHL for the Vancouver Canucks, and the more he travelled, the more he realized what a gem his hometown was.

"I grew really proud of the place I was from," he said. "I wanted to represent that pride somehow, and I knew the easiest way to do that was to wear it."

He started Country Liberty as a "passion project," ordering 12 T-shirts and putting the Country Liberty logo on them.

"All I was hoping for was to make my money back on the shirts," he said. "But it just took off from there."

Sawyer Hannay pitches his Country Liberty business on Dragons' Den. (Submitted by Sawyer Hannay)

Rexton a key ingredient to his success

The Country Liberty brand has since grown to include a line of wine made by a local winery and rustic Liberty Village rental cabins on the Richibucto River, all of it promoted on social media sites that lean heavily on New Brunswick's natural beauty as a backdrop for almost every photo.

It's all part of the expanding lifestyle experience Hannay is pitching, and Rexton, with its sprawling, unspoiled vistas, is a key ingredient to its success.

"People love the vastness and the outdoorsy nature of it," he said. "It's what I grew up with, we grew up barefoot and running wild on tons of land, with beaches and a river nearby … and I know now how fortunate we were."

 

Sometimes Hannay's photo promotions just feature New Brunswick scenes, such as this one of Cap-Pele, captioned: New Brunswick, Canada. Our home and inspiration to represent rural Canadians right accross this wonderful country. Isn’t she beautiful! (Submitted by Sawyer Hannay)

Hannay has been steadily growing the company's market, leveraging social media and websites and strategic collaborations with big-name brands (a recent Coors ad features a group of young adults wearing Country Liberty T-shirts) and says with tools like this, running a business from a village on the outer reaches of the country is completely doable.

There are some cons — operating from a rural location means higher delivery costs, for example  — but basically, he said, "as long  as I have my phone and my laptop, I can run the business from anywhere."

But extra investment funding never hurts.

Earlier this year, he made the trek to Saint John to try for the regional qualifying pitch for Dragons' Den and made the cut.

New Brunswick scenes, such as this covered bridge in Richibucto, feature prominently in Country Liberty's social media campaigns. (Submitted by Sawyer Hannay)

N.B. shoutouts on Dragons' Den

On Thursday, the episode featuring Hannay aired. Wearing one of his own lumberjack-plaid jackets, he sold his rural brand on a Toronto-based film production set, and there were New Brunswick shoutouts aplenty.

"I told them New Brunswick was my inspiration," Hannay said.

Not all the Dragons were on board with his pitch. Some thought it was "too distracted," that he should narrow the scope and just focus on clothes.

But Arlene Dickinson, an eight-season Dragons' veteran and one of Canada's leading entrepreneurs, leaned in.

At first, she said, she too thought it was "too distracted," with clothes, blankets, rental cabins, wines.

"And then I started thinking about small-town New Brunswick," Dickinson said. "And the fact that you said most of your customers are existing customers and repeat customers. I think the community you're building and the way you're building it is incredibly smart. Especially where you're doing it from."

The bottom line? Hannay got the $150,000 backing, and left the show pumping his fist in the air.

A view of the Richibucto River from a rental cabin in Hannay's Liberty Village. (Submitted by Sawyer Hannay)

Sharing accolades with his home province

On Friday, an elated Hannay said he'll meet with his team to decide how best to focus that money, but bolstering his social media reach will be a key part of it.

Representing New Brunswick will be a key part of it as well.

By early Friday afternoon, Hannay was just scratching the surface of the waves of congratulatory messages that have come in, many from New Brunswickers who watched the show and said he "made New Brunswick proud."

For Hannay, sharing the accolades with his home province is only fitting.

"I'm so proud of where I live," he said. "I've travelled so many places, and I learned that this is a very special place. And I'm thrilled to be able to get others to see that it's a special place, too." 

About the Author

Marie Sutherland is a web writer with CBC New Brunswick based in Saint John. You can reach her at marie.sutherland@cbc.ca.

 

31 Comments  
Commenting is now closed for this story.

 

 


David Amos
Methinks the Irving Clan and many other old Maritmers such as I have many fond memories of that area and for me Camp Wildwood in particular decades before Sawyer Hannay was born Hence we who enjoy speaking Chiac with our French friends should agree that he has every right to brag of his Hometown N'esy Pas?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
David Amos 
Chalk up one for the little guy
 
 
DeanRoger Ray
Reply to @David Amos: We agree in this instance. 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: Methinks only your buddies in the RCMP would care what you think about anything N'esy Pas?
 
 
DeanRoger Ray
Reply to @David Amos: I don’t actually have any buddies in the RCMP. But I’m a huge fan of Blakely, Lynch, and good ‘Ol Sgt Moe though.
 
 
David Amos 
Content disabled 
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: Methinks everybody who bothered to read a recent article about the actions of your pal Cpl Blakely investigating the demise of one of the cops who stole my Harley etc in 2007 then they would know its legal for the cops to lie Furthermore everybody who has been paying attention to your recent efforts to jerk my chain must realize you are a minor shill for the RCMP who spreads the bs for them on a daily basis lately to keep yourself from being arrested N'esy Pas?
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @David Amos: BINGO 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @DeanRoger Ray: Desperate shills say desperate things 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Luke Armstrong
NB an awesome little province! I love the beauty, peace and especially the people.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Luke Armstrong: Me Too
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jos Allaire
All the best, Mr. Hannay. The family name is very well known for their business knack in that area. . Rexton and Kent County are a gem. Wish you great success!
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to @Jos Allaire: Methinks my friends in Kent County should remind your SANB political pals of what I pitched to the Dragons Den's producers when they came to Fat Fred City many moons ago because like your buddy little Lou you would never believe me N'esy Pas?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Lou Bell
I could be wrong , but I was quite certain I heard Hannay say on the show that he was drafted by the Vancouver Canucks at the age of 17 . I don't believe playewrs that young were allowed to be in the NHL draft at that age . False facts stated in the public domain these days don't take long to catch up to someone . I may be wrong , just sayin' . Perhaps someone can verify this . A lot of times Midget aged hockey players are drafted into Junior Hockey at age 17 .
 
 
Lou Bell
Reply to @Lou Bell: I apologize . He was born Sept 2 , 1992 and was drafted in the 2010 NHL draft by the Vancouver Canucks . Normally the draft is held in June so he would have been 17 years old at the time . He was the 213th pick . Good job Sawyer and good luck in your venture 
 
 
Jos Allaire
Reply to @Lou DumBell: Old Lou, foot and mouth disease, as usual.
 
 
Carlson MacKenzie
Reply to @Jos Allaire: Tell ya what Jos, he owned up to his mistake and clarified the facts as well. Full marks for that, it doesn't happen very often here.
 
 
Jos Allaire
Reply to @Carlson MacKenzie: Certainly not form her!
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to @Jos Allaire: Oh So True
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Doug McBride
New Brunswick is a wonderful place to call home and I am glad this young man has decided to live his dream here! I have a Country Liberty hat and wear it proudly! We will also plan to stay in his cabins next summer and stay vacation in New Brunswick! Hopefully our grandkids in the West will be available to visit next summer and we can take them as well! Well done young man!
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to @Doug McBride: Good for you
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Theo Lavigne
Good luck with your venture young man, hope you succeed...
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to @Theo Lavigne: I second your remark
 
 
 
 
 
  

 

No comments:

Post a Comment