There is new information tonight about a car that was seized by police in New Glasgow on Monday.
Police say they seized the 2002 Chev Impala in connection with the Amber Kirwan homicide investigation, but they won't reveal who owns the car.
However, people who live in the neighbourhood where the car was seized tell CTV News the car belongs to Christopher Alexander Falconer.
"I always knew it as Chris' car…because Chris was always in the car driving around on the roads," area resident Wayne Desmond tells CTV News.
Falconer was one of two men convicted of second-degree murder in the killing of cab driver Robert LeBlanc on Heathbell Road in 1998, but he was released on full parole in May.
Police say they arrested Falconer in New Glasgow Wednesday afternoon on a parole violation. He was transferred to the Nova Scotia Correctional Facility in Dartmouth on Thursday.
"Yesterday afternoon police arrested an adult male on Brother Street, New Glasgow as a result of a correctional service apprehension and suspension of a full parole warrant," confirms New Glasgow Police spokesman Const. Ken MacDonald.
Falconer was arrested just under a kilometre from where police seized the car on Monday, but police say his arrest is not related to the Kirwan murder investigation.
RCMP say no one has been arrested in relation to the Kirwan case.
Police have not said what led to Falconer's arrest, but under conditions of his release, Falconer was ordered to avoid anyone known to be involved in criminal activity.
Witnesses say Falconer was walking down Brother Street when he was approached by police and patted down Wednesday afternoon. They say he was then taken away in a police vehicle.
"It was pretty quiet, he went willingly," says area resident Stephanie Fanning. "They took him and they put him in his cuffs and they put him in the car."
Meanwhile, the search of a property in Heathbell in connection to the Kirwan case continues.
RCMP were back at the mobile home on Hardwood Hill Road where they first executed a search warrant on Tuesday.
They won't say what exactly they are looking for, or how long they plan to search the property, but they believe they will be there at least until Friday.
"If it is deemed that there is still evidentiary value and the police still have the scene secured, the search will continue," says RCMP spokesman Const. Bill Rudolph.
Police haven't confirmed who owns the home, but neighbours say Alice Meier, the stepsister of Falconer, lives there.
The home is roughly three kilometers from where police discovered Kirwan's body on Saturday.
An intense search for the missing teen began last month after she disappeared from a New Glasgow pool hall.
Her friends say she left Dooly's around 1:30 a.m. on October 9 with the intention of meeting her boyfriend at Big Al's, a nearby convenience store.
Kirwan is seen leaving Dooly's and walking up the street towards Big Al's, but her boyfriend says she never showed up, and Kirwan doesn't appear on surveillance tapes from the parking lot at Big Al's.
Police, RCMP divers and ground search and rescue teams conducted extensive searches throughout parts of Pictou County, including the Heathbell area, last month.
They returned to Heathbell on the weekend to execute a search warrant on a farm property in the area when they discovered her remains on a logging trail, just off Heathbell Road on Saturday afternoon.
A funeral service will be held for Kirwan this Saturday at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Stellarton.
With files from CTV Atlantic's Dan MacIntosh