Into Thin Air – Patricia Quinn | Indigenous mother, sister and daughter last seen in Lytton
LYTTON — Since the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and 2SLGBTQI+ people, the epidemic has become a larger topic of discussion across the country. The 2019 inquiry found Indigenous women are statistically more likely than non-Indigenous women to experience violence, be killed or go missing. And BC’s Interior isn’t exempt from the problem. In this episode of Into Thin Air, we review the disappearance of Patricia Quinn. The 33-year-old from Lytton First Nation went missing in July of 2008 and her family feels more could have been done to investigate her disappearance, and keep the word out about her case.
In the 17 years Patricia Quinn has been missing, Lytton has changed dramatically. The town was destroyed by wildfire and the rebuild hasn’t been completed yet. Much of the Quinn family remains in Lytton First Nation, haunted by their desire to know what happened to Patricia.
“I wish I knew where she’s at. That’s the one. I want her to come home, if she’s still out there,” says William Quinn, Patricia’s father. “If she’s gone I’d hope we could find her to let her rest in peace.”


