VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) – The final report on missing women from Commissioner Wally Oppal is expected to be made public any day now. But a man whose sister’s DNA was found on the Pickton farm is angry about how victim’s families are being informed of the report’s release.

Ernie Crey was expecting that he and other family members of missing and murdered women would get a copy of the report in person from Oppal.

“They [have now] told us that they’re going to stream the announcement of the report over the Internet… we’ll get a copy ourselves — the family — on hour before it’s more broadly available. But I think it’s a clinical, disrespectful… way of doing this,” says Crey.

“I just feel that they thought it would be too messy… too human… too troubling to actually have the families present as the report is being released,” he adds.

Crey says he has a troubling vision of families reading the report all on their own, without any support present or anyone to comfort them. He’s now writing to Commissioner Oppal, the premier, and members of the cabinet.