GUILTY Canada - Melonie Biddersingh, 17, found dead in suitcase, Vaughan, ON, 31 Aug 1994

This case serves as a reminder how many unidentified deceased people have never been reported missing.

Not long ago I suggested to the OPP Resolve Unit that they start engaging the public more to elicit tips from people that have not seen or heard from a relative in a very long time, especially when the story of their whereabouts is vague. It could very well speed up the identification of those that have been without a name for 10+ years.

The reply from the OPP was polite enough, but left a lot to be desired. Waiting for the call, as in this case is fine, but one can always do more.

I'm glad Melanie has her name back.
 
I only hope that there is a very special place in hell for both the real father a man who should have love daughter and protected her and that stepmother
 
In 1994, they lived in an apartment building in Parkdale that had at least 22 floors.
 
A step-parent notoriously dislikes the children from their new spouses prior relationship(s). Not all, but many.

Randy Dooley, among others, is a classic case of that. When a male lion takes over a pride, the first thing they do is kill the offspring of the previous male. In my experience, human females and males behave in the same manner. Sometimes worse, according to the news. Sentencing has to reflect this as a deterrent.
 
Two questions according to the new articles from Canada when the 15 year old brother fell, jump or was pushed out of the window, why didn't the police search the apartment where he lived, maybe and just maybe they could of have save her in time. Seeing that according to the news reports she was living in a closet. Second question concerns Melonie' real mother when her answers as to why she could not reach or find Melonie and her ex-husband was always coming up with an excuse as to why he could not contract her with Melonie why didn't she get on a plane, boat and look for her, If I didn't hear from my daughter in two years you bet I woould of have came to Canada to find her
 
I'll be interested to know how they finally put all these pieces together after all this time. Seems like a tip was called into police...I wonder what kind of tip, and why now?
 
I'll be interested to know how they finally put all these pieces together after all this time. Seems like a tip was called into police...I wonder what kind of tip, and why now?



From the link in the OP


A simple phone call to police last November was the key that unlocked a murder mystery going back almost two decades.

“It started with a phone call from a person with a conscience,” Toronto police Det. Sgt. Steve Ryan told a news conference Wednesday.

“It goes to show the power of a phone call. It’s a difficult case.”

The call, from a person Ryan would not name, helped police identify 17-year-old Melonie whose charred remains were found in a suitcase behind a Vaughan industrial plaza on Sept. 1, 1994.
 
Good questions EveDallas. The investigating cops clearly did not give a RA, imo. TPS has had accusations of racial profiling for years with no recourse or resolution.

The CBC News announced on air this evening that Chief of Toronto Police, Bill Blair, will receive the 'Diversity Award' today. I think this case has a lot to do with that - considering one cannot find the last person to be given this award. There is a website for this award (Diversity Business Network), but it is totally bogus, also imo. The CBC does not have the nerve to put this in print on their website - only a brief mention on air.

Blair and his predecessor leave a poor trail of leadership. As for Melonie's mother - many people, like Melonie, don't stand a chance from the moment of conception. Imho.
 
I am guessing the "tipster" was probably a sibling. It sounds like the all the kids had a horrible life.

If it was a sibling who reported it, hopefully this will be a step toward healing for them.
 
This is the first I have heard of this story. My heart aches and I wish there was something I could do to help this poor woman get justice for her children and have them rest in peace near her home. Does anybody know if there are any agencies helping her?
 
Fund set up to help return body of ‘suitcase murder’ victim to mother in Jamaica

City Councillor Michael Thompson has set up a fund to collect donations to return the body of the “suitcase murder” victim to her mother in Jamaica.

Donations are being accepted at all branches of the Royal Bank, payable to the “Tragedy Fund.”

sniped from article...

http://www.thestar.com/news/article/1157661--fund-set-up-to-help-return-body-of-suitcase-murder-victim-to-mother-in-jamaica
 
http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca/2013/01/08/biddersingh-boys-remains-to-be-exhumed

Biddersingh boy’s remains to be exhumed
By Chris Doucette, QMI Agency
Tuesday, January 8, 2013 9:01:56 EST PM

*snip*

TORONTO - A teenage boy’s questionable suicide in 1992, two years before his older sister’s mangled remains were found in a burning suitcase, is now the subject of a Toronto Police cold case investigation that has a Welland connection.

Det.-Sgt. Steve Ryan revealed Monday the remains of Dwayne Biddersingh will be dug up more than two decades after the 15-year-old plunged to his death at a Parkdale highrise.

More at link
 
This just tears me up. I only heard of Melonie and her brother Dwayne today. How positively dreadful. Obviously they did not raise enough $ to transport his remains. His coffin was so deteriorated, they had to remove his remains from it in the plot.

Absolutely heartbreaking.

Toronto police exhume teen’s body in 1994 cold case murder investigation of older sister

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Painstakingly pulled from cold, hard ground, the remains of a teenage boy may breathe new life into the murder investigation of his older sister and could raise questions about his own death more than two decades after an apparent suicide.

In a rare step Tuesday, Toronto Police took more than seven hours to exhume the body of 15-year-old Dwayne Biddersingh, who in 1992 fell from the 22nd storey balcony of the Jamaican family’s Parkdale apartment in what was deemed a suicide at the time.

The coroner’s office — who enacted their authority to unearth the state burial plot where no plaque marks Biddersingh’s name — set up with investigators from homicide squad’s cold case unit in Beechwood Cemetery, as snow swirled around marble tombstones and settled on synthetic flowers.

Though unearthing remains is an uncommon investigative step, police now say they want to make sure nothing was missed after the body of Biddersingh’s 17-year-old sister Melonie was found inside a burnt-out suitcase in 1994, with signs of torture.

Waterlogged and with the grave’s sides caving in, crews were delayed for several hours while they were forced to reinforce the sides with concrete slabs and metal planks.

After 4 p.m., a decision was made to open the casket — too damaged to be lifted from its final resting place. Biddersingh’s remains were placed in a container and loaded into a black coroner’s van to be transported to the Toronto morgue.

That’s where Kathy Gruspier comes in, a forensic anthropologist who specializes in bones.

http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/cri...ing-to-determine-if-1992-suicide-was-a-murder
 
I am sooooo relieved this girl has been identified, very thankful! Is there another thread now on her father and stepmother?
 

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