CANADA Canada - Cynthia Audy, 27, Winnipeg, Manitoba, 28 Oct. 2004

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  • #1
Cynthia Albena Mae Albina Audy

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  • Case Classification: Missing
  • Missing Since: October 28, 2004
  • Location Last Seen: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Physical Description
** Listed information is from the time of disappearance.
  • Date of Birth: January 26, 1977
  • Age at Time of Disappearance: 27 yrs
  • Race: Aboriginal
  • Gender: Female
  • Height at Time of Disappearance: 67 inches
  • Weight at Time of Disappearance: 161 lbs
  • Hair Color: Brown
  • Eye Color: Brown
  • Alias(s) / Nickname(s): Cynthia Albena Stevens
  • Distinguishing Marks/Features: Tattoo(s): Right cheek (near eye) - Heart, Right hand - Text \"Cynthia\"; Right wrist - Text \"Steven\"; Left hand - Text \"Nathan\", Text \"Amber\", Heart; Left wrist - Heart; Right forearm - Panther or Tiger; Left ankle - Text \"Pray for Me\".
    Scar(s): Scar on shoulder and 5\" long scar on right cheek. Pierced ears.
  • Dentals: Unknown
  • Fingerprints: Unknown
  • DNA: Unknown
Clothing & Personal Items
  • Clothing: Red padded bra, black blazer, blue jeans, blue jean purse, black Fila runners
  • Jewelry: Unknown
  • Additional Personal Items: Gold link watch
Circumstances of Disappearance
According to police, Cynthia Albena Audy (AKA STEVENS), was last seen on October 28th, 2004 in the North End area of Winnipeg, Manitoba getting into a vehicle. Audy's sister says the date was Oct. 24, 2004.

The Doe Network: Cynthia Albena Mae Albina Audy - 3467DFMB
 
  • #2
Cynthia Albena Audy, 27, was the mother of two children when she vanished from Winnipeg’s North End in October 2004. The Winnipeg Police Service’s investigation turned up no leads, and in July 2012, Project Devote took it on. Investigators last met with Audy’s sister, Angelita in the fall of 2014.

What Angelita Stevens misses most about her older sister, Cynthia Audy are the surprise visits.

“She was always coming to see me, even though I lived far,” she said as she got out of her chair.

Stevens is uneasy. She mentions she’s at the University of Toronto, where she studies, and she doesn’t want anyone to overhear the conversation.

In the echoing hall, Stevens continues.

She and her sister, both from Manitoba’s Wuskwi Sipihk First Nation, shared a father, but were raised in different homes.

They were together on the night that Audy was seen for the last time.

According to the Winnipeg Police Service (WPS) it was Oct. 28, 2004, but Stevens says that’s not the case.

“They got the date wrong,” she said, exasperated.

Stevens is frustrated because in the last two months she’s had tell details of that night over and over to different investigators but they are not any closer to finding out what happened.

She says it was after midnight on Sunday, Oct. 24, 2004 when the girls ran out of beer. She remembers the date for two reasons: It was the first time the two drank together and it was the last time they ever hung out.

They were at Audy’s townhouse on Winnipeg’s Jarvis Avenue.

“I remember the date perfectly because that’s the last time I ever saw my sister,” Stevens said.

Audy told her she was going to run to the vendor to get beer, and she needed to make money on the way.

She jumped into a three-seated, navy blue and grey Chevrolet pickup truck near the corner of Selkirk Avenue and Andrews Street.

“I went running to give her a condom,” Stevens said.

She says Audy worked the streets occasionally to support herself, and had told her she would be right back.

Stevens waited for her sister for hours, and when she didn’t return, she went home.

“Honestly, my sister wouldn’t have left me like that,” she said.

Days later, the WPS showed up to take her statement. Stevens says they told her that Audy’s boyfriend reported the 27-year-old’s disappearance.

In July 2012, the WPS handed the case to Project Devote, a Manitoba task force dedicated to investigating missing and murdered persons cases.

Since then, investigators travelled to Toronto twice to see Stevens, who lives there now. The most recent visit was fall 2014.

“...They showed me 10 pictures of different guys,” she said.

She did not recognize a single one.

Stevens would like to see a federal inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls. She believes the number of girls and women who have met those fates is higher than the one on the RCMP’s report.

And the issue has seeped into more than one aspect of her life: Stevens was friends with Felicia Solomon, whose body parts were found in Winnipeg’s Red River in June 2003.

Both were in Grade 10 at R.B. Russell high school together.

Although Stevens’ hope to find her sister alive has faded, she wishes for closure for her family.

“I want to know what happened to my sister,” she said.

“If she’s dead... That way, I can bury her.”

https://www.cbc.ca/missingandmurdered/mmiw/profiles/cynthia-albena-audy
 
  • #3





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Alias: Cynthia Albena Mae Stevens
<<Cynthia was last seen by her sister in the early morning hours of October 24, 2004. She was seen getting into a 3-seated, navy blue and gray Chevrolet truck near the corner of Selkirk Avenue and Andrews Street, the North End area of Winnipeg.

Law enforcement and Cynthia’s family disagree the date of Cynthia’s disappearance. Her family saw her last on the 24th and law enforcement report it as the 28th of October.>>
 
  • #4

Tribal information: Cynthia is a member of the Wuskwi Sipihk First Nation of Manitoba. The tribe has an enrollee number of 623 as of 2011.
 

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