On 18 May 1993, 15-year-old Christine Harron, headed out to school after having stayed home that morning.
She was never seen again, nor were her remains ever found.
In August 2004, a local man, Anthony Edward Ringel, then 36, confessed to family and the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) that he had killed Christine.
Unfortunately, police blunders meant the confession and subsequent evidence gathered by the OPP was deemed inadmissible by Superior Court Justice R.M. Thompson.
The publication ban is no longer in effect, and the following documentary was produced by David Ridgen for the CBC.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2012/05/18/christine-harron-hanover.html
http://www.mcsc.ca/mc_cases/christine-marianne-harron
I have no additional insight, but I remember seeing the posters up everywhere.
She was never seen again, nor were her remains ever found.
In August 2004, a local man, Anthony Edward Ringel, then 36, confessed to family and the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) that he had killed Christine.
Unfortunately, police blunders meant the confession and subsequent evidence gathered by the OPP was deemed inadmissible by Superior Court Justice R.M. Thompson.
The publication ban is no longer in effect, and the following documentary was produced by David Ridgen for the CBC.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2012/05/18/christine-harron-hanover.html
http://www.mcsc.ca/mc_cases/christine-marianne-harron
I have no additional insight, but I remember seeing the posters up everywhere.