With their home trashed by vandals, N.B. couple at a loss about what to do next
CBC
A New Brunswick family says they're at a complete loss about what to do next after discovering their home had been broken into and trashed while they were living on P.E.I.
Keith Reid and his partner Meaghan Law said their home may be beyond repair
Reid, who is a heritage stone mason, moved his family — including Law and their two children, Bryce, four years old, and Melody, five months old — to P.E.I. after he was hired to work on the restoration at historic Province House in Charlottetown.
The couple was travelling back and forth to Napadogan, N.B., a remote rural community about an hour north of Fredericton.
But COVID-19 restrictions and a new baby cut back the number of times they could travel.
They checked on the house in late July, and everything was fine.
But what they found when they returned to the house earlier this month left them devastated.
"We went inside and it was just a mess," Reid said during an interview from their Stratford, P.E.I. apartment.
Law added: "They went through everything in the house."
Every room in the house was trashed.
Copper wiring and pipes were ripped from the home.
A truck parked outside, which the family used for hauling wood, was flipped on its side and its catalytic converter stolen.
A camper on the lot was also damaged.
"They obviously were very thorough going through everything in the house. They trashed everything," said Law.
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