Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario man arrested in 1970s murders of two B.C. girls

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Dec, 2014 12:00 PM

    VANCOUVER — Shari Greer made a promise to her 11-year-old daughter as she grieved over the girl's grave site that she would never give up the hunt for the killer.

    Almost 40 year later, Greer says she's still wrapping her head around an arrest made on Friday that brings resolution to her mission.

    Mounties in British Columbia revealed Monday they have arrested and charged a 67-year-old Ontario man with first-degree murder in the historic deaths of two young girls, who separately vanished near their homes in the 1970s.

    Kathryn-Mary Herbert, 11, disappeared in Abbotsford, B.C., in 1975, and 12-year-old Monica Jack was last seen in Merritt, B.C., three years later.

    "When this is over, I am going to have a well-deserved breakdown. I will forever hear my heart break," Greer, Herbert's mother, told a news conference after police thanked her for her relentless advocacy over the years.

    "I want you to know these two little girls, Monica and Kathryn-Mary, made a difference in this world while they were here."

    Both girls disappeared while travelling short distances while alone on roads in the southern part of the province.

    Officers refused to provide specifics of what led to the breakthrough, saying they brought Garry Handlen into custody without incident in Surrey, B.C., although he no longer lives in the province.

    Supt. Ward Lymburner, the officer in charge of the special projects unit, said three decades of investigation by multiple police forces combined to pinpoint the same suspect.

    He described Handlen as having travelled extensively through B.C. and Alberta at the time and released the man's photograph from that era, asking the public to come forward with tips if it jogs any memories. He said the man previously lived in the Lower Mainland and has a criminal record.

    "He was brought into the investigation as a suspect or person of interest ... early on," Lymburner said.

    "It has taken this long for us to gather the evidence needed in order to satisfy the courts to bring him forward on charges today."

    He wouldn't comment on any existence of DNA evidence, but said all advances in forensic technology have been brought to bear.

    Herbert was reported missing on Sept. 24, 1975, after failing to return home from a friend's house in Abbotsford, B.C., about 8:30 p.m. She was last seen by another friend who doubled her on his bicycle part-way, police said.

    The girl's body was turned up two months later in an undeveloped area of a First Nations reserve, prompting a series of investigations that included the issuing of a private $10,000 reward in 2012.

    Jack was last spotted on May 6, 1978. She was riding her bicycle alone along a stretch of Highway 5A, near the Nicola Ranch in Merritt, B.C., more than 200 km northeast from where Herbert disappeared.

    The girl's bicycle was found strewn down an embankment the following afternoon, not far from where she lived, but it took another 17 years to find her body. Remains were discovered in a rural area north of the city, after a fire.

    Investigators added the mystery of Jack's death to Project E-PANA, which had been probing 18 unsolved homicides or missing-women cases along B.C. highways. In 2007, new investigators reviewed 500 previously-conducted police tasks and initiated 241 more tasks, including a series of re-interviews and new forensic analysis.

    "Every time I hear news on the TV about some other little girl or boy disappearing, or found murdered, it really hurts me. I know how that feels," said Jack's mother, Madeline Lanaro.

    "We expect our parents to die, but we don't expect our children to die."

    Handlen remains in custody and is scheduled to next appear in Abbotsford Provincial Court on Dec. 8.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada's collective memory at risk due to shortcomings at Archives: auditor

    Canada's collective memory at risk due to shortcomings at Archives: auditor
    OTTAWA — Future generations may not be able to enjoy Canada's recorded heritage — including photos, maps and important documents — because Library and Archives Canada is not collecting all of the material it should from federal agencies, the auditor general says.

    Canada's collective memory at risk due to shortcomings at Archives: auditor

    Highlights from the fall 2014 report of the federal auditor general

    Highlights from the fall 2014 report of the federal auditor general
    OTTAWA — Highlights from auditor general Michael Ferguson's fall 2014 report, released Tuesday:

    Highlights from the fall 2014 report of the federal auditor general

    Harper earmarks $5.8B for federal infrastructure, including parks, museums

    Harper earmarks $5.8B for federal infrastructure, including parks, museums
    LONDON, Ont. — Prime Minister Stephen Harper unveiled a $5.8-billion menu of federal infrastructure improvements Monday in an announcement one political rival immediately described as a batch of recycled promises.

    Harper earmarks $5.8B for federal infrastructure, including parks, museums

    Vets needing PTSD benefits face dizzying paperwork, eight-month wait: auditor

    Vets needing PTSD benefits face dizzying paperwork, eight-month wait: auditor
    OTTAWA — Many of Canada's battle-scarred veterans wait up to eight months to find out if they are eligible for long-term, mental-health disability benefits and the department responsible for their care has no idea if its treatment programs are effective, the auditor general said Tuesday.

    Vets needing PTSD benefits face dizzying paperwork, eight-month wait: auditor

    Splitting off investigative role from Elections Canada cost $2.9 million

    Splitting off investigative role from Elections Canada cost $2.9 million
    OTTAWA — A Conservative government decision to move the office that investigates election fraud out from under the roof of Elections Canada is costing almost $3 million in up-front costs.

    Splitting off investigative role from Elections Canada cost $2.9 million

    Harper's infrastructure plan to cost $300M next year, will trim surplus to $1.6B

    Harper's infrastructure plan to cost $300M next year, will trim surplus to $1.6B
    That's Ottawa's new projection for next year's budgetary surplus following Prime Minister Stephen Harper's $5.8-billion infrastructure announcement.

    Harper's infrastructure plan to cost $300M next year, will trim surplus to $1.6B