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[加拿大新聞] 290 unsolved murders on the Lower Mainland over 12 years
290 unsolved murders on the Lower Mainland over 12 years
Finally, after months of research and interviews, we’re launching our database on unsolved murders on the Lower Mainland from 2002 to 2013. I have been working on this project with Sun reporter Mike Hager. It originated from an idea I had been kicking around since Jan. 2012 that there should be a database with all unsolved murder cases listed just so people can read about them and possible provide tips.
Getting it all put together has been quite a task, but I think it’s worth the effort. Sun data journalist Chad Skelton built the site for us. Librarian Kate Bird pulled hundreds of news articles from archives. Massey Padgham edited our series. Maggie Wong, Mark Yuen, Ric Ernst, Jason Payne and Janelle Schneider worked on videos and photos.
Here’s the database, followed by our first story:Part 1: The worst crime – 290 unsolved Lower Mainland murders in the past 12 years
If murder is the worst crime, then solving cases where someone’s life has ended violently and prematurely should be a top priority for law enforcement agencies in Metro Vancouver.
But a Vancouver Sun investigation has found that over a 12-year period, 290 murders remain unsolved across the Lower Mainland.
The Sun compiled information for a comprehensive database from 2002 to the end of 2013 from police releases, news archives and court files.
Canada’s largest murder squad — the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team — worked with The Sun to verify the 178 murders on our list for which IHIT has sole responsibility.
The Vancouver Police Department has conduct of another 90 unsolved homicide cases in the same time period, including files from West Vancouver and Port Moody that the VPD was contracted to investigate.
Not surprisingly, most of the unsolved murders took place in Vancouver or Surrey — the two largest cities in the region. Vancouver had 86 cases over the 12-year period, while Surrey had 76.
But smaller cities in the region also have many unsolved murders. Burnaby has 22. Abbotsford — twice declared the murder capital of Canada at the height of the gang war — has 24.
The victims in a startling 86 per cent of the unsolved cases were men.
Sixty-three per cent of the total number of victims — or 184 — had links to either the drug trade, gangs or organized crime. The most common form of death was gunfire — with fatal shootings accounting for 168 of the 290 victims.
Carol Kinnear’s daughter Brianna is the victim in one of the unsolved cases. The 22-year-old, whose boyfriend was gangster Jesse Margison, was shot to death in Coquitlam on Feb. 3, 2009 as she drove a friend’s truck.
“It’s basically over five years now and it’s become a cold case. I think they’re just working on other stuff,” Carol Kinnear said.
“I want everyone who’s involved not to forget. It’s sad to know that there’s people out there that can bring us answers.”
Police officers investigating murder cases say that while the public might be alarmed by the number of unsolved files, there are several reasons why there are so many murder cases in Metro Vancouver where charges have never been laid.
They point to B.C.’s charge approval standard, which is the highest in Canada.
Supt. Kevin Hackett, the veteran Mountie in charge of IHIT, said in the vast majority of his agency’s open files, investigators have identified a suspect.
“I would think that in 90 per cent of our investigations, if not more, not only do we have an idea, we could likely, if we lived in another jurisdiction arrest them and charge them,” Hackett said in an interview.
In every other province besides Quebec, police have the power to lay charges where they believe on “reasonable grounds” after a thorough investigation that an offence has been committed, according to Justice Canada.
But in B.C., Crown prosecutors decide if and when a charge is laid using a two-pronged approach. First, the Crown must be convinced that there is “a substantial likelihood of conviction,” based on the police report outlining the evidence.
And secondly, the Crown decides whether it is in the public interest to lay a charge.
If, for example, a suspect in a slaying has already been convicted in another killing and is serving a life sentence, the Crown might decide there’s no public interest in having a second trial. So the file remains open.
“Let’s say we’ve charged one guy with murder and we have evidence to potentially charge him for two or three more, but Crown says it’s not in the public interest so we are not going to charge him,” Hackett explained. “It’s solved because we know who did it and we could charge him and yet it’s unfair that it remains unsolved and it drives your clearance rates down, when actually we could throw it to Crown or lay an information and they would just stay it. And they have a point — if he’s doing 25 years.”
Still, Hackett says, IHIT has an excellent relationship with prosecutors despite the charge approval standard.
Murders are investigated a variety of ways in the Lower Mainland. IHIT is the largest agency by far, with 84 investigators plus support staff covering homicides cases for RCMP detachments from Squamish to Chilliwack, as well as municipal forces in New Westminster, Port Moody and Abbotsford.
Vancouver police investigate their own murder files as a stand-alone agency, but have a close relationship to IHIT.
Vancouver Sgt. Dale Weidman said the two agencies even work together on files in some cases.
“If you have a murder in Vancouver and a murder in Langley, for example, and we think it’s the same suspect, we work with them,” he said. |
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