Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Landscaper Now Facing Five Murder Charges In Case Of Missing Gay Men

The Canadian Press, 29 Jan, 2018 12:00 PM
    TORONTO — Dismembered skeletal remains have been recovered from the bottom of large planter boxes at a home linked to an alleged serial killer who worked as a landscaper, Toronto police announced on Monday.
     
     
    In what police called an unprecedented situation in Canada's largest city, investigators announced three more first-degree murder charges against Bruce McArthur, who had already been charged with killing two men who had disappeared in the city's gay village. They also said they there might be more victims.
     
     
    "We do believe there are more. I have no idea how many more there are going to be," Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga said. "We're investigating some 30 properties. We believe there are more remains at some of these properties that we're working to recover."
     
     
    Forensic experts have yet to identify the remains, Idsinga said.
     
     
    McArthur, 66, was charged Jan. 18 in the presumed deaths of Selim Esen and Andrew Kinsman. He was further charged on Monday in the deaths Majeed Kayhan, 58, Soroush Mahmudi, 50, and Dean Lisowick, 47.
     
     
    Kayhan went missing in 2012, Mahmudi was reported missing in 2015, while Lisowick was never reported missing. Mahmudi and Lisowick did not fit the profile of some of the other men who were reported missing — Middle Eastern men known to frequent Toronto's gay village area. 
     
     
    "We know that many in the community are struggling to understand and process these developments," Idsinga said. "(But the investigation) certainly encompasses more than the gay community. It encompasses the city of Toronto," Idsinga said.
     
     
    Police had initially shut down the rumour that a serial killer was prowling the streets of the city's gay village, stressing in December that they did not know whether Esen's and Kinsman's disappearances were linked or even if the men were still living. That has now changed dramatically.
     
     
    Investigators said they have identified 30 properties where McArthur worked and are now scouring them for any further evidence. They also said they are planning to excavate at two properties "where people might be buried" but said it's not known what, if anything, they might find.
     
     
    "We believe there are more remains at some of these properties that we're working to recover," Idsinga said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Southern Vancouver Island's First Baby Of 2018 Born On Laundry Room Floor

    Southern Vancouver Island's First Baby Of 2018 Born On Laundry Room Floor
    The first baby born on southern Vancouver Island in 2018 made a dramatic entrance Monday, delivered on the floor of the family's laundry room with her father's help and coaching from a 911 dispatcher.

    Southern Vancouver Island's First Baby Of 2018 Born On Laundry Room Floor

    Young Political Staffers Most Vulnerable To Sex Harassment On The Hill, Says Elizabeth May

    May is making the observation following a new Canadian Press survey of female MPs that suggests the problem is as prevalent in the corridors of power in Ottawa as it is everywhere else.

    Young Political Staffers Most Vulnerable To Sex Harassment On The Hill, Says Elizabeth May

    Wrongfully Imprisoned B.C. Man Denies Allegations Of Assault In Civil Lawsuit

    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man awarded millions for wrongful imprisonment is now defending himself in a civil lawsuit, again denying he sexually assaulted five women.

    Wrongfully Imprisoned B.C. Man Denies Allegations Of Assault In Civil Lawsuit

    Ex-Hostage Joshua Boyle Facing 15 Charges, Case Adjourned Until Monday

    Ex-Hostage Joshua Boyle Facing 15 Charges, Case Adjourned Until Monday
    OTTAWA — Former Canadian hostage Joshua Boyle made a brief video appearance in an Ottawa courtroom today after being charged with 15 offences, including sexual assault, following his release from captivity in Afghanistan.

    Ex-Hostage Joshua Boyle Facing 15 Charges, Case Adjourned Until Monday

    Snowmobilers Rescue Moose Buried Neck-deep In Snow In Western Newfoundland

    Snowmobilers Rescue Moose Buried Neck-deep In Snow In Western Newfoundland
      DEER LAKE, N.L. — A group of snowmobilers pulled out their shovels to free a stuck moose after spotting its head poking out of freshly fallen snow in western Newfoundland.

    Snowmobilers Rescue Moose Buried Neck-deep In Snow In Western Newfoundland

    Cutting-Edge Design School, Named For Lululemon Exec Chip Wilson, Opens In B.C.

    Cutting-Edge Design School, Named For Lululemon Exec Chip Wilson, Opens In B.C.
    A state-of-the-art design school named after the founder of active wear giant Lululemon is the latest addition to Kwantlen Polytechnic University's campus in Richmond, B.C.

    Cutting-Edge Design School, Named For Lululemon Exec Chip Wilson, Opens In B.C.