Inspector says there is no evidence to suggest the case is linked to the deaths of four Indigenous women last year whom investigators believe were the victims of a serial killer
woman’s body at the city’s Brady Road landfill – the same landfill where the victim of an alleged serial killer was found less than a year ago.
“At this time, we have no information to suggest that there are any other victims, or that this investigation is related to any previous incidents,” Insp. Pike said Tuesday. “I think it’s important for us right now to focus on this particular scenario, investigation … how this is affecting her family, her friends, her community. I think it’s very important for us to keep focused on this right now.
Mr. Skibicki was first charged last May, after the partial remains of Rebecca Contois, 24, a member of O-Chi-Chak-Ko-Sipi First Nation, were discovered in a garbage bin outside a Winnipeg apartment building, and then at the Brady Road landfill. While investigators with Winnipeg Police concluded that Ms. Harris’s and Ms. Myran’s bodies were at Prairie Green in June of last year, they did not reveal this to the families until the charges were announced in December. By that point, they said it was too late to search the landfill, and that trying to do so would be too difficult and dangerous because of contaminants at the site, including asbestos.
That feasibility study is expected to be completed in four to six weeks, according to a statement Tuesday by Grand Chief Cathy Merrick of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, who is leading the feasibility study.
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