Close X
Tuesday, October 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

Missing, murdered women inquiry hears stories of loss at first B.C. hearing

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Sep, 2017 10:16 AM
  • Missing, murdered women inquiry hears stories of loss at first B.C. hearing
Mary Jane Hill wasn't there to witness the birth of her grandchildren or to see them graduate from high school. She won't be there when her daughter needs her most, when she's in pain, or on her wedding day.
 
These are the losses Vicki Hill says she's suffered because of the death of her mother, whose naked body was found along British Columbia's Highway of Tears in 1978.
 
"I never knew her, but to me, in my eyes, she gave me life," Hill told the national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women on Tuesday. "Now I have to live without her."
 
Hill was the first family member to testify at an inquiry hearing in Smithers, B.C., on Tuesday. She spoke softly and slowly, and her 15-year-old daughter, Zoey Hill-Harris, comforted her as tears rolled down her face.
 
She said she was only six months old when her mother died and has no memories of her. The murder was never solved and she has struggled to get information and documents from police, she said.
 
Hill read from a coroner's inquest report that concluded her 31-year-old mother died of bronchitis and pneumonia as a result of manslaughter. There was semen on her body and her clothes were discovered in an alley in Prince Rupert, 33 kilometres from where she was found dead, she said.
 
Dozens of women have died or gone missing along the stretch of Highway 16 between Prince Rupert and Prince George, which has become known as the Highway of Tears.
 
"I'm not only speaking for my mom, I'm speaking for the rest of the families. I feel their pain, I feel their hurt. I can see it. I'm not afraid," she said. "Things have got to change, no matter what." 
 
Hill called on the commissioners to listen to families and bring them justice, adding she wants to see improved cellphone service and transportation along the Highway of Tears.
 
There is no cell service between Prince Rupert and Terrace, or in nearby Moricetown, she said, and she's never seen phone booths or emergency telephones, either.
 
A British Columbia inquiry into missing and murdered women recommended bus service along the route, but it took years for the service to arrive, and some buses have to be caught in the middle of the night, she said.
 
Vivian Tom, chief of the Wet'suwet'en First Nation in Burns Lake, also spoke Tuesday. Her powerful testimony about her 21-year-old daughter Destiny Tom brought several observers to tears.
 
Tom recalled forgiving and hugging her daughter's common-law partner and killer, Garrett George, who pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to just over eight years in prison last November.
 
She also described a vision she had in church soon after her daughter's death. She saw her daughter's body, and she held her and rocked her in her arms, she said.
 
"I said, 'Destiny, I'm so sorry! I'm so sorry for what happened to you! I love you and I miss you. I'm so sorry that you were all alone when this happened,' " she said through sobs.
 
Tom said she then saw white wings sprout from her own shoulders and hands emerge from clouds above, then she flew with her daughter's body to place it gently in the hands.
 
When she had her daughter's tombstone made, she made sure it had angel wings on it, she added.
 
Tom and her husband are raising their granddaughter, Cassidy, who is now seven. She was six when she talked about committing suicide, she said.
 
"It just broke my heart," said Tom. "She figured that because the teenagers in our community attempted suicide ... she figured, death, suicide, then she could be with her mom.
 
"I sat her on my lap, I said, 'Baby girl, if you commit suicide, you can't be with mom, because mommy fought hard for every breath.' "
 
The inquiry has been plagued by controversy, with commissioner Marilyn Poitras resigning this summer and complaints from families about delays and poor communication.
 
Chief Commissioner Marion Buller said during opening remarks Tuesday that she and fellow commissioner Michele Audette will listen to families and survivors with open minds and open hearts.
 
Smithers is the first of nine communities the inquiry will visit this fall. The hearings runs through Thursday.

MORE National ARTICLES

Two-Tear-Old New Westminster Girl Dies Dies After Falling Into Drainage Ditch

Two-Tear-Old New Westminster Girl Dies Dies After Falling Into Drainage Ditch
Police did not reveal the circumstances around the apparent drowning death.

Two-Tear-Old New Westminster Girl Dies Dies After Falling Into Drainage Ditch

Bullet Holes, Blood Smears Shown At Murder Trial In Kelowna, B.C.

Bullet Holes, Blood Smears Shown At Murder Trial In Kelowna, B.C.
Former RCMP forensic officer Cora Malewski testified in B.C. Supreme Court on Wednesday, saying there were holes all around the Porsche Cayenne when she shot the video.

Bullet Holes, Blood Smears Shown At Murder Trial In Kelowna, B.C.

Three Greens Make History At B.C. Legislature Swearing-in Ceremony

Three Greens Make History At B.C. Legislature Swearing-in Ceremony
Sonia Furstenau, Adam Olsen and party leader Andrew Weaver each capturing a seat on Vancouver Island in last month's election. 

Three Greens Make History At B.C. Legislature Swearing-in Ceremony

B.C. Legislature Returns June 22, Stage Set For Confidence Vote On Liberals

B.C. Legislature Returns June 22, Stage Set For Confidence Vote On Liberals
Premier Christy Clark has said she expects to lose a confidence vote in the house after the New Democrats and Greens reached an agreement to allow the NDP to form a minority government. 

B.C. Legislature Returns June 22, Stage Set For Confidence Vote On Liberals

Trial Begins For Former RCMP Official Accused Of Sexual Assault

Trial Begins For Former RCMP Official Accused Of Sexual Assault
Michelle Booker told the judge hearing the case without a jury that former inspector Tim Shields also sexually harassed the woman at E Division headquarters in Vancouver.

Trial Begins For Former RCMP Official Accused Of Sexual Assault

Charges Expected Against Two Men Accused In Countless Heists From B.C. Mailboxes

VICTORIA — Two men have been arrested on Vancouver Island in connection with break-ins and thefts from mailboxes in several areas of British Columbia.

Charges Expected Against Two Men Accused In Countless Heists From B.C. Mailboxes