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$50K reward renewed by Trina Hunt's family for tips in active murder case

A suspect's release from a June arrest, without charges, is the latest publicly known activity in the active investigation into the Port Moody woman's death.

It's been nearly three months since a suspect following an arrest in Port Moody related to Trina Hunt's murder case.

On June 6, which would have been her 50th birthday, a family spokesperson confirmed to the Tri-City News a man arrested in connection with her death was released without charges.

Investigators could not disclose the identity of the suspect as the case remains active and ongoing.

Now, Trina's loved ones have renewed their call for any information that could lead to an arrest or charges, along with a cash reward of $50,000.

The large sum was , in a statement from the family read by the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT), which explained the money was brought together by Trina’s parents, Charles and Diana Ibbott, as well as her brother Brad and his wife, Jen.

In the latest update, Hunt's family confirmed that Iain Hunt, Trina's husband, is not contributing to the reward.

Since then, more signs have been posted around the Tri-Cities and Metro Vancouver regions in hopes someone will step forward with tips, regardless of how small or irrelevant it may seem.

"We will not give up and we will continue to fight for you, Trina. You deserve nothing less," reads a social media post on Thursday (Aug. 25) about the renewed reward.

As of this morning (Aug. 29), the post has reached around 95,000 views.

"I have complete confidence that this has reached the eyes of those who need to see it," added family spokesperson Stephanie Ibbott, Hunt's cousin-in-law.

"It may seem simple or silly to care so much, but knowing that this many people care about #JusticeForTrina gives us so much hope and renewal of faith in the world after a deeply traumatic time."

Timeline revisited

Hunt was found dead in a rural area south of Silver Creek, just outside of Hope, B.C., on March 29, 2021 — investigators publicly confirmed her remains on May 1 the same year.

She was reported missing to the Port Moody Police Department (PMPD) on Jan. 18 earlier that year.

In the months that followed, more than 500 volunteers spent 1,200 hours searching and covering 2,000 km of land  woman.

IHIT's arrest in June 2022 had also marked one year since the last known activity related to the Hunt's case was made public, in which officers executed  — including Hunt's Heritage Mountain residence and one in Mission, where a vehicle was taken for evidence.

Two months later, in August 2021, the Hunt family held an intimate celebration of life among friends and peers.

No other information has been made available since the suspect was released without charges, and Ibbott told the Tri-City News the update was disappointing to the family.

"We thought we would maybe have reason to celebrate in a new way today but that’s not the case, instead it’s another blow," she said.

"This is a warning to the person or the people that did that [killed Hunt], I think this is their warning that IHIT has not forgotten."

On June 6, witnesses told the Tri-City News one person came out of Hunt's home in handcuffs around 4 p.m. after police swarmed the residence.

IHIT confirmed an arrest was made "at a Port Moody home" in connection to her case and that the suspect was co-operative.

A police spokesperson explained officers rushed inside the home, spoke with the man inside and took him into custody, and investigators had obtained "sufficient information" that led to the arrest.

Anyone with details or tips regarding Hunt's homicide is strongly urged to call IHIT at 1-877-551-4448 or email [email protected], anonymous contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 or go online to .

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