- Rosalie is an enrolled member of the Hatchet Lake Denesuline First Nation. She grew up on that Indian reserve. The word "Indian" refers to First Nations.
- She is Robert Dennis Burseth's wife.
- Her husband Robert Burseth, Constable Alfonse Noey, and Points North Landing's assistant manager, Mark Eikel discovered Kenton Carnegie's mangled corpse. Chris Van Galder and Todd Svarckopf returned to Eikel's truck without viewing Carnegie's mangled corpse. Rosalie, who investigated the incident with both Robert and Constable Noey, noticed that one set of wolf tracks were on top of Carnegie's footprints when she viewed the snow, but eventually noticed from photographs that another set of wolf tracks were in the snow beside Wollaston Lake on its western shore. These snowy footprints were aiming directly to Carnegie's tracks.
- She and Robert reside in MacDowall, Saskatchewan.
- Rosalie, her husband Robert, and Constable Alfonse Noey noticed wolf tracks in the snow when they arrived at Carnegie's death site. Mark Eikel was waiting for them in a pick-up truck along with Todd Svarckopf and Chris Van Galder. Only Eikel noticed Carnegie's mangled corpse before Rosalie, Robert, and Constable Noey's arrival. This search party heard a wolf pack howling around the camp's vicinity.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content