
B.C. lawyer accused of placing human remains in plastic bin was victim's 'trusted friend,' family says
CBC
The daughter of a university instructor killed in Kamloops, B.C., is shocked to learn one of her father's trusted friends is linked to the homicide investigation.
Lawyer Rogelio Butch Bagabuyo, 54, has been accused of placing the remains of 60-year-old Thompson River University instructor Mohd Abdullah in a plastic bin, and is charged with one count of interfering with a dead body.
It is not yet known if he is believed to be linked to the homicide itself.
Abdullah's daughter, Sarah Jeet Lalata-Buco, lives in the Philippines and says she last spoke with her father on March 7, a week before he was reported missing and 10 days before his body was found.
Lalata-Buco described her father, who worked in Thompson Rivers University's computer science department, as a soft-spoken man with a strong work ethic.
"My dad is a quiet person, but he is kind," she said. "He always gives me wisdom whenever we talk. Whenever he visits me here in the Philippines, he always talk to me — heart-to-heart talks."
Her husband, Jhuls Buco, described Abdullah as a "humble" person he could always turn to for advice.
"A loving dad, is how I see him," he said.
Buco said Abdullah and Bagabuyo were close friends and he often heard about the lawyer from his father-in-law.
"He's saying this man is a trusted friend, a good friend ... whenever he needs legal advice, he always goes to Butch," he said.
RMCP say 60-year-old Abdullah was last heard from on March 11 and reported missing on March 14 after he failed to report to work.
He was found dead inside a vehicle on the 1600-block of Monterey Place on March 17, and on March 23 police said he is believed to be a homicide victim.
Bagabuyo is accused of placing Abdullah's remains in a plastic bin and is charged with one count of interfering with a dead body.
Bagabuyo was released on bail on Friday.













