the remarks made from the ex police officer were very spot on.
you can listen to it
via and IPN set to canada
Browsec VPN your Personal Privacy and Security Online
it is an extensions for chrome- add it- use it then ditch it
it is free and harmless
this is the link that worked for me
https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radi...clip/15729637-july-30-the-manhunt-in-manitoba
the other links came up with a blocked icon
and i am canadian
also
maybe there is a transcript
Looking for a transcript, in the meantime other comments about this case from Michael Arntfield.. lengthy article.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/killers-schmegelsky-mcleod-north-canada-1.5227088
Jul 27, 2019
"People are inevitably fascinated and frightened by what they don't understand, and I think it's the mystery and the question of why that people find so compelling," says Western University criminologist Michael Arntfield.
"The fact that these people could be targets — the randomness of it frightens everybody, and people are inevitably galvanized by that."
"Arntfield has followed the case along with the rest of the world. But he sees it through the lens of a man deeply schooled in the science and history of crime.
If the allegations against Schmegelsky and McLeod are true, Arntfield says they would find themselves in the company of the rarest of killers: couples who form a bond through killing.
)
The relationship is not necessarily sexual as most people understand it, but it is intimate.
Arntfield says there have been about 120 similar cases in the U.S. and only three in Canada.
"There's people who kick around all kinds of vague ideas as to why these people do this. They're angry at the world, or their parents divorce," Arntfield says.
"In reality, there is an underlying paraphilia or psychological defect that drives this behaviour."
A 'homicidal bromance'?
The three Canadian "team killer" cases Arntfield points to are some of the country's most notorious crimes:
- Dellen Millard and Mark Smich, convicted of the first-degree murders of a complete stranger and a one-time lover.
- Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka, the killers of schoolgirls Leslie Mahaffy and Kristen French.
- William and Lila Young, the chiropractor and midwife couple who sold and killed infants at a Nova Scotia maternity home from the 1920s to 1940s in what has become known as the Butterbox Babies case.
"There is some sort of disordered bond or intimacy that gets created through the commission of violence," says Arntfield.
"The thought is that even friends or family members — while it may not be an overt sexual attraction to it, there is a disordered intimacy, in this case some kind of homicidal bromance that gets formed and galvanized with each killing."