Canadian police are headed to the community of York Landing, Manitoba, in pursuit of fugitives Kam McLeod, 19, and Bryer Schmegelsky, 18, after the pair were spotted by members of an Indigenous patrol group.
Locals in York Landing, which borders Split Lake, say they heard gunshots and were told to stay inside their homes as police responded to reports the pair had been spotted searching for food. They reportedly fled into thick trees when they were spotted.
York Landing, halfway between Lake Winnipeg and Hudson Bay, is home to less than 500 people. It is serviced by ferries which leave every few hours on a two-hour trip to Split Lake.
Statement from local York Factory chief Leroy Constant confirms that the individuals were spotted at the local dump by the Bear Clan patrol. #canadamanhunthttps://t.co/MClDjgLhmW
The pair are wanted over the murders of Australian backpacker Lucas Fowler and his American girlfriend Chynna Deese and university professor Leonard Dyck, 64 on highways in British Columbia this month.
This morning sightings of the pair were coming in thick and fast, prompting authorities to move the search area from Gillam to York Landing.
RCMP Manitoba issued an advance warning for locals to expect a sudden and heavy police presence in their area but told residents not to post photos of the manhunt or disclose their location.
Over the weekend, police carried out a door knock in Gillam, where the teen's last known getaway car was found abandoned and torched in dense bushland near a rail line in Gillam last Monday.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police searched every room of every house in the tiny town of 1,200 people, as well as hundreds of abandoned buildings in the area.
Police are working on the theory that after the teens torched the small SUV they used to cross the country, they can't have got far. Police believe they are either hiding in town or on the outskirts — a swampy area known to be particularly inhospitable.
Locals say conditions are brutal, and the suspects, if on foot and unprepared, would have difficulty surviving. A number of bears have been spotted by officers canvassing the area.
Military aircraft were called in over the weekend to join a fleet of vehicles including armoured cars. Drones are flying overhead and tracker dogs are leading officers on the ground.
Police have received more than 200 tips from members of the public that suggest Schmegelsky and McLeod are still in Gillam, but they have not ruled out the possibility the teens altered their appearances and slipped out of the region altogether.
What we know about their journey so far is they quit their jobs at Walmart in Port Alberni on the country's west coast and made purchases for a 1700km drive to Yukon territory on July 12.
They told family they were looking to make some "real money". They travelled to Whitehorse, where they contacted relatives before they fell off the radar.
On the night of July 14 or the morning of July 15, police say Schmegelsky and McLeod murdered Mr Fowler, 23, and Ms Deese, 24. They dumped the pair's bodies in a grassy area next to their broken down Chevrolet van.