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Unsolved murders: Deadly danger on the stroll
Serial killer Robert Pickton is in jail, but sex workers are still killed and experts say proposals for new legislation could make things worse
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Unsolved+murders+Deadly+danger+stroll/9832267/story.html#ixzz31bhdLkab
Sharon Anne Dietrich, Michelle Caroline Choiniere and Lisa Arlene Francis.
They were sex trade workers murdered, then dumped under bridges or into the brush beside quiet logging roads — dark and desolate places similar to the areas they worked.
Experts say the unsolved murders of at least 11 Lower Mainland sex trade workers in as many years are a testament to the dangers still faced by these marginalized women, despite the absence of a prolific serial killer like Robert Pickton.
Between 1978 and 1998, the murders of at least 40 sex trade workers went unsolved in the province, the vast majority occurring on B.C.’s South Coast, according to Vancouver Sun archives.
“The danger really hasn’t changed post-Pickton,” Pivot Legal Society’s board chairwoman Kerry Porth said of the murders, adding that it is nothing to celebrate.
In December, the Supreme Court of Canada gave the Conservative government a year to draft new legislation after it ruled that three prostitution laws — which banned keeping a brothel, living off avails of prostitution and street soliciting — violated sex trade workers’ constitutional rights to life, liberty and security of person. Meanwhile, B.C., like other provinces, has said it will only prosecute cases where pimps or customers have exploited these vulnerable sex trade workers, many of whom are working to support an addiction or battling mental illness.
Little is known about the murder of Charity Marie Cassell, a 28-year-old whose body was dumped in an Abbotsford cornfield near the American border on Sept. 16, 2004, and is one of the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team’s oldest open files.
Cassell’s alias was Sherrie Marie Morrison and she first was arrested and charged for possession of illegal drugs in Surrey on March 18, 1999, at the age of 23, according to online court records. Two days later, she was charged in the same city with communicating for the purpose of prostitution. From then, until two weeks before her body was found in the field, Cassell was in and out of jail for a variety of probation violations.
The deaths of sex trade workers like Cassell can be very difficult for police to solve because they often involve a murderer who is a stranger to the victim, according to Porth.
Danielle LaRue’s short and painful life likely came to an end at the hands of a stranger who hired her for sex.
The 24-year-old went missing from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside in late November 2002. A month later, the VPD received an anonymous letter from her killer.
“This is about a Vancouver prostitute who disappeared at the end of November 2002. Don’t remember name she gave me, had no ID. Sounded like she had just recently come to Vancouver. Caucasian, long black, curly hair, jeans, black leather jacket, tattoos and jewelry. She is dead,” the letter read. “To her family. I am sorry more than you can imagine. I did not intend this but am still responsible. She will not be unmourned. Have brought flowers to her grave once already, plan to do so every years as am able. Not ideal, but better than no visits at all. I know you can’t forgive me, but please believe I tried my very hardest to bring her back.” |
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