CrimeSolver
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- Feb 11, 2007
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●Lois Hanna, 25, disappeared from her home at 286 Nelson St. in Kincardine, a lakeside town 200 km northwest of Toronto, on Sunday, July 3rd or Monday, July 4th, 1988. Hanna was last seen on the evening of the 3rd at a school reunion dance in Lucknow, a town about 25 km south of her home. She left the dance at 10:30 p.m. and apparently made it home safe, because a co-worker checking up on her when she failed to show up for work the next morning found a cup of tea on the counter, the TV on, and the dress she had worn to the dance hanging in the closet. Hanna had lived in the house by herself for close to four months. According to police, there were no signs of violence in the house. Despite the search efforts of police, search dogs, and many volunteers, no trace of Lois Hanna was ever found.
There is a $50,000 reward in this case:
www.opp.ca/Intranetdev/groups/public/documents/investigative/opp_001153.pdf
www.owensoundsuntimes.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=822265&auth=Jonathon%20Jackson
●9-year-old London, Ontario boy Frankie Jensen disappeared on his way to school on Friday, February 9th, 1968. His body was found floating in the Thames river near Thorndale, Ont. on Friday, April 12th. Police believed he was the victim of a sex-killer. No further information.
●57-year-old Antonio Cotroneo was stabbed to death shortly after 5:30 on the morning of Thursday, September 4th, 1986 in the parking lot of his apartment building at 1560 Lawrence Ave. W., west of Keele St. Cotroneo was on his way to work at a wholesaler when a young man accosted him from behind and stabbed him several times in the chest, neck, and arm. Cotroneo was dead on arrival at Sunnybrook Hospital. A witness in a nearby apartment, who heard the victim’s cries for help and raced to the scene, described the murderer as between 20 and 25 years old, 5’9”, with a medium build and dark or black mid-length hair. He was wearing a white T-shirt and dark-coloured rugger-style pants with two white stripes on the outside of the legs. Police believed the suspect hitchhiked out of the area with a female companion after the killing.
●Animal breeder Elgin Cullen, 65, suffered a fatal .22 rifle wound to the heart on Monday, November 14th, 1960 on his farm near Highway 27 and Richview Sideroad (now Eglinton Ave. W.) in what is now northwest Toronto. A thumb and forefinger had also been blown off, suggesting a defensive posture. A rifle was found on the ground near the victim’s body, but it was determined to have not been the murder weapon.
The victim’s wife Queenie told of hearing gunshots at around 7:30 p.m., and she found her husband’s body in a field some time later when she went to look for him. A neighbouring farmer later came forward to tell of being approached around the time of the murder by a man who asked for directions “to the pony farm”.
●On March 25th, 1994, the charred body of 24-year-old Louisa DaCunha was found in a remote field in Caledon, north of Toronto. DaCunha, who lived on Queen St. W. in the low-income Parkdale neighbourhood of Toronto, was a marginal individual known to police as someone involved in illicit drug use. No further information, including cause of death.
●55-year-old Paul Volpe, a prominent mobster in Toronto’s underworld, was found shot to death on Monday, November 14th, 1983. Volpe’s bullet-riddled body, blood-soaked and wrapped in towels, was discovered in the trunk of his BMW sedan on the second level of the parking garage of Terminal 2 at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport. Police intelligence squad officers had been tipped off by an anonymous call. Volpe had left home on Sunday morning, telling his wife he was meeting someone at the airport and that he would be home by 12:30 p.m.
There is a $50,000 reward in this case:
www.opp.ca/Intranetdev/groups/public/documents/investigative/opp_001153.pdf
www.owensoundsuntimes.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=822265&auth=Jonathon%20Jackson
●9-year-old London, Ontario boy Frankie Jensen disappeared on his way to school on Friday, February 9th, 1968. His body was found floating in the Thames river near Thorndale, Ont. on Friday, April 12th. Police believed he was the victim of a sex-killer. No further information.
●57-year-old Antonio Cotroneo was stabbed to death shortly after 5:30 on the morning of Thursday, September 4th, 1986 in the parking lot of his apartment building at 1560 Lawrence Ave. W., west of Keele St. Cotroneo was on his way to work at a wholesaler when a young man accosted him from behind and stabbed him several times in the chest, neck, and arm. Cotroneo was dead on arrival at Sunnybrook Hospital. A witness in a nearby apartment, who heard the victim’s cries for help and raced to the scene, described the murderer as between 20 and 25 years old, 5’9”, with a medium build and dark or black mid-length hair. He was wearing a white T-shirt and dark-coloured rugger-style pants with two white stripes on the outside of the legs. Police believed the suspect hitchhiked out of the area with a female companion after the killing.
●Animal breeder Elgin Cullen, 65, suffered a fatal .22 rifle wound to the heart on Monday, November 14th, 1960 on his farm near Highway 27 and Richview Sideroad (now Eglinton Ave. W.) in what is now northwest Toronto. A thumb and forefinger had also been blown off, suggesting a defensive posture. A rifle was found on the ground near the victim’s body, but it was determined to have not been the murder weapon.
The victim’s wife Queenie told of hearing gunshots at around 7:30 p.m., and she found her husband’s body in a field some time later when she went to look for him. A neighbouring farmer later came forward to tell of being approached around the time of the murder by a man who asked for directions “to the pony farm”.
●On March 25th, 1994, the charred body of 24-year-old Louisa DaCunha was found in a remote field in Caledon, north of Toronto. DaCunha, who lived on Queen St. W. in the low-income Parkdale neighbourhood of Toronto, was a marginal individual known to police as someone involved in illicit drug use. No further information, including cause of death.
●55-year-old Paul Volpe, a prominent mobster in Toronto’s underworld, was found shot to death on Monday, November 14th, 1983. Volpe’s bullet-riddled body, blood-soaked and wrapped in towels, was discovered in the trunk of his BMW sedan on the second level of the parking garage of Terminal 2 at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport. Police intelligence squad officers had been tipped off by an anonymous call. Volpe had left home on Sunday morning, telling his wife he was meeting someone at the airport and that he would be home by 12:30 p.m.