CANADA Canada - Toronto Crimes Discussion

  • #661
From CrimeSolver's 2008 post.
Hoping that DNA can soon help solve this case.

http://www.websleuths.com/forums/sh...ronto-Crimes-Discussion&p=2647146#post2647146
rbbm.
Sunday, August 12th, 1962: The defiled body of 16-year-old Julian (Julie) Wolanski is found in a ditch off Indian Line (at the time relatively remote farm country north of Toronto Airport near what is now the Claireville Reservoir), sparking one of the largest unsuccessful manhunts in the city’s history. The victim, a shy girl who lived on Wallace Ave. in the city’s west end and went to Givins St. public school, had been missing since Tuesday the 7th. She had been stripped of almost all her clothes, brutally raped, beaten about the face and head, shot through the heart with a .32 calibre bullet, and dumped out of a moving car into the ditch where she lay. She must have been held captive for several days, because an autopsy and other evidence determined she had been dead not much longer than 48 hours before she was found. A man living near the isolated body-dump scene recalled hearing a car’s brakes screeching several times on Friday night.
At 4 p.m. on the Tuesday afternoon she disappeared, Julian told her mother she was taking public transit to Eglinton subway station, where she was to meet a teacher about requirements for finishing grade 9. Police later learned the person she went to meet was an imposter, and that the same man had called Julie in the days and weeks before her murder seeming to know a good deal about her life and school activities. A taxi driver saw Julie standing on the northeast corner of Yonge St. and Eglinton Ave. at around 6 p.m. Two other witnesses told police they had seen a sobbing Julie inside Eglinton subway station asking for change to make a telephone call.
In the wake of the crime, many girls and women came forward describing uncannily similar incidents of a man posing over the phone as a doctor with the board of education, insisting he needed to perform examinations on them. He had some knowledge of their lives, just as he did of Julie’s life.
In a newspaper article 21 years after the crime, the lead police investigator stated that he had a strong suspect, but could never amass enough evidence against him to make an arrest.

Comment: Police should now approach the suspect - if alive – with a DNA request, assuming evidence is still retained and still holds DNA after almost 50 years
.

https://www.torontopolice.on.ca/homicide/case/13/1962
16-year-old Julian (Julie) Wolanski
On Sunday, August 12, 1962, police responded to a check address call on Indian Line near Rexdale Boulevard.

The victim was discovered at the side of the road, suffering from gunshot wounds, and obviously deceased.

Investigators believe the victim was last seen leaving her residence on August 7, 1962 at about 4:30 p.m.
How You Can Help:

If you have any information regarding this case, please contact Homicide at 416-808-7400, or at [email protected]
Crime Stoppers

Phone anonymously at 416−222−TIPS (8477); or via the internet at www.222tips.com; or text TOR and your message to CRIMES (274637); or download the free Crime Stoppers Mobile App on iTunes, Google Play or Blackberry App World.
 

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  • #662
  • #663
Re: Gordon George Joyce

According to the Toronto Star of Friday, April 8, 1983 an arrest was made.

Gordon George Joyce.png
 
  • #664
●Elementary school teacher Graham Pearce, 36, was stabbed in the throat in the master bathroom of his 25th-floor apartment at 35 High Park Ave. on Sunday, March 20th, 1983. By the time his roommate found him shortly before 1 p.m., Pearce had bled to death. Police believed the bachelor was murdered by someone he either brought home with him or admitted to the apartment early on Sunday morning. Police later learned Pearce had spent Saturday night at Stages, an upstairs gay bar at the Parkside Tavern on Yonge St. near Wellesley St., where he was last seen by a friend walking to his car at 3:30 a.m. Sunday morning.

●At 1 a.m. on Monday, December 7th, 1992, Balbir Singh Brar was shot dead in the driveway of his house on Foxacre Row in Brampton, just northwest of Toronto. His wife found his body at 8 a.m. Brar was a well-known activist in the Sikh community who had recently been embroiled in a war of words between different Sikh factions over control of temples and property. Witnesses saw two males in their late teens or early twenties driving away from the scene. Both were of average height and build, and wore bomber jackets and some type of headgear.

●On January 22nd, 1980, 29-year-old Delmer Gilchrist was shot to death in an underground garage on Markham Rd. He had just picked up the day’s earnings from a pinball parlour owned by a friend when he was shot from behind. The crime remained unsolved as of one year later, when the last newspaper report ran.

●80-year-old Margaret McDonald died from the severe blows to the head and slashed throat she suffered at the hands of one or more intruders to her home on Lascelles Blvd (at Kilbarry Rd.) in the affluent Toronto neighbourhood Forest Hill on Friday, June 24th, 1994. McDonald was last heard from at 12:30 p.m. that day when she talked with a friend on the phone; her 26-year-old granddaughter found her body in her bedroom at 7 that evening. McDonald had also been sexually assaulted. The upscale house had been ransacked from top to bottom. The killer had gained entry by forcing open a rear sliding door.
The most probable suspect was a suspicious man seen in the area. He was described as white, early or mid-20s, 5’10”, medium build, black hair in a ponytail, wearing black leather pants and leather boots with large heels. DNA found at the scene could still lead to the killer, as could an expensive, distinctive ring the culprit stole from McDonald’s jewelry collection.

●On September 15th, 1974, Suzanne Miller, 26, a mother of three young children, was seen getting into a car in London, Ontario, about 200 km west-southwest of Toronto. Her body was found on Saturday, October 12th in dense bush in Thorndale, just northeast of London. She had died of blows to the head. No further information is available, but it is presumed this case remains unsolved.

Rbbm.
More information about the murder of Suzanne Miller in this 2015 book .
https://books.google.ca/books?id=f-nWCQAAQBAJ&pg=PA214&lpg=PA214&dq=1974,+Suzanne+Miller+murder&source=bl&ots=haRdW6VVm2&sig=LfMyZKv0sDMP419rtFpbmwlNOHI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjkuoKizOrPAhVKxoMKHQ3LBPIQ6AEINjAE#v=onepage&q=1974%2C%20Suzanne%20Miller%20murder&f=false

Murder City: The Untold Story of Canada's Serial Killer Capital, 1959-1984

By Michael Arntfield

 
  • #665
concerning Maria Woods not Marie-She was my neighbour and the case has had a couple of suspects but no arrests. I remember those days because it was me and not her husband (because legally divorced) had to go into her home several times and had police and reporters at my door even on Sunday mornings at 6a.m. with questions after questions. I was the first to report her missing and there is one person who was of great interest who did the same to a very young girl and Maria had woken up on a boat too after being knocked out when this person put something in her drink. A week later she was dead and the night she left, probably not on her own free will someone just about stripped the gears on her car and she would not of done that. If I got up to look I might of seen something that would identify the person and i've lived with that for the rest of my life. There is alot to this story that was never printed and some that was but wrong. I hope we get some answers soon!!!

Wondering about Brian Miller who was questioned regarding Diane Werendowicz.
 
  • #666
New lengthy article.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/toronto-police-cold-case-crime-1.3885186
[h=1]When the case doesn't close: tales from the Toronto police cold-case unit[/h]
[h=3]'Sometimes I get calls and there's absolutely nothing I can do,' says Det.-Sgt Stacy Gallant[/h] By Ali Chiasson, CBC News Posted: Dec 10, 2016
More than 500 cold-case files haunt the Toronto police major crimes unit like unfinished business. It's Det.-Sgt. Stacy Gallant's job not to forget about them — and he won't, if the victims' families have anything to say about it.
"There's probably not a week that goes by that I don't get a phone call or an email or something from a family member of a victim asking that we look at the case again," he told CBC Toronto in an interview about a recent development in a cold case from 2010

Toronto police have 587 open, unsolved cases dating back as far as 1921. It's up to a team of six detectives to try to solve at least some of them.
These are some of the older cases he calls his "constants," because he revisits them regularly:

  • 1973 – Donna Stearne and Wendy Tedford, two 18-year-old girls found shot to death at Wilson and Keele
  • 1982 – Christine Prince, a young nanny taken in the night and sexually assaulted before being dumped in the Rouge River, south of the 401
  • 1983 – Susan Tice and Erin Gilmour, two separate murders six months apart
  • 1994 – Margaret McDonald, an 80-year-old woman who was sexually assaulted and murdered after her house was broken into
In all of the above cases, investigators were able to collect DNA evidence belonging to an unknown offender.

[h=2]DNA phenotyping, a giant leap for solving cold cases[/h] Gallant says that through genetic phenotyping, narrowing down a suspect pool is much easier considering that a persons-of-interest pool can include dozens — and sometimes more than 100 — people.
If a file includes thorough enough DNA samples, phenotyping can reveal a suspect's ethnicity, hair colour and/or eye colour. It's not evidence, but an investigative tool capable of advancing DNA-rich cold cases.
Gallant explains how he would reorganize his suspect pool if, for example, the database indicates a suspect is a male of European descent with blue eyes and blond hair.
"I'd put my blond hair, blue-eyed males at the top of my list and all the non-white, black hair, brown-eyed people at the bottom," Gallant said, adding that he would not eliminate the latter set of suspects because phenotyping is "an investigative tool, it's not 100 per cent."
 
  • #667
  • #668
Just want to say: thank you dotr for updating all the Toronto crime links! You've done so much since I first "met" you on here on the Mariam Makhniashvilli threads. xo
 
  • #669
Investigation heating up again!
Wish LE would indicate which bars/rest. the two women attended, it might help, imo.

http://www.citynews.ca/2016/03/23/same-man-responsible-in-two-cold-case-murders-toronto-police/

Same man responsible in two cold case murders: Toronto police

Posted Mar 23, 2016

View attachment 90987

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rbbm.

In that era I'm thinking racketball or fitness clubs were becoming popular if you could afford them. Tice looks the athletic type. I could see some guy getting an address or copying a key maybe from a locker room. Some clubs had bars or social dances. I knew a guy who DJ'd at one regularly. He would meet regulars that way. Just thinking. That or even skiing or ski club type of thing.
 
  • #670
Also posted in Emad Rozik's thread.
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?324226-Emad-Rozik-49-car-wash-owner-murdered-6-July-2010-Toronto&p=13010269#post13010269
[h=2]Emad Rozik, 49, car wash owner, murdered, 6 July 2010,Toronto[/h]
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/thecurrent/t...ller-1.3882165
December 06, 2016

The Current

with Anna Maria Tremonti

'I need to know your name': A desperate search for Emad Rozik's killer

A fatal shooting has witnesses, video, and a voice. But, six years later, it's still a cold case.

Emad Rozik was working at the carwash he owned in Scarborough, Ont., July 6, 2010, when a man walked in and began rummaging behind the counter.
Emad suspected he was being robbed and called 911, but that didn't stop the man from pulling out a gun and starting to shoot. Audio of Emad's 911 call captured the shooter's voice and surveillance cameras captured his face. When police and paramedics arrived, Emad was rushed to the hospital, but he died of a gunshot wound.

http://www.cbc.ca/radio/popup/audio/...ntid=1.3882165
 
  • #671
In regards to the murder of Judy Carter:

A potential suspect (and possibly more) was considered to be Robert George Fitton, who was convicted and hanged for the rape and murder of 13-year-old Linda Lampkin in 1956. As noted in an article from April 15, 1955 (Toronto Daily Star) one of the only regular users of the stretch of road where Judy Carter was found, was a mail carrier from Unionville. Another part of the article states that a truck from a Toronto bread company was seen parked at one of the bridges where Judy was found.

The following is from a Supreme Court Judgement (October 24, 1956), R. v. Fitton (in regards the murder of Linda Lampkin)

"At approximately 9 p.m. on January 18, 1956, the respondent, who is an employee of a cartage agency under contract with the Post Office Department, took the deceased Linda Lampkin for a ride in his mail truck, and two hours later left her dead body on Commissioners Street in south central Toronto. When the body was discovered, the underclothing was ripped and torn, and it is in evidence that this young girl of 13 years old, had been the subject of sexual intercourse. Around her neck was a deep groove in the flesh tissue, which corresponded in size to the width of a scarf which she was wearing. The evidence reveals that she died of asphyxia due to strangulation."

Did Fitton's route go through this region or did he have any knowledge of this road, as this road during the fall, winter and spring, was barely passable at the time?April 15 1955 pg 14 Bread Truck Seen.jpg
 
  • #672
This cold case crime is heating up again, lengthy article in the news today!
DNA and fresh tips from the public may help things along.
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?325314-Margaret-L-McWilliam-21-27-Aug-1987-quot-Cinderella-Murder-quot-Toronto&p=13026522#post13026522
Margaret L. McWilliam, 21, 27 Aug.1987 "Cinderella Murder"Toronto

Crime Solver's earlier summary of the case.
.Rbbm.
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?63274-Canada-Toronto-Crimes-Discussion&p=2319689&highlight=Margaret+McWilliam#post2319689

 
  • #673
Important update for this case, posted by CrimeSolver.
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?63274-Canada-Toronto-Crimes-Discussion&p=2396481#post2396481
[url]http://www.cp24.com/news/police-close-1983-cold-case-after-determining-that-suspect-has-been-dead-for-16-years-1.3240066
Police say that they have closed a 34-year-old homicide case after determining that a person of interest died in 2001.
The case dates back to March 20, 1983 when police were called to an apartment building on High Park Avenue by the roommate of 36-year-old Graham Hugh Pearce.
Upon arrival, officers located Pearce’s lifeless body on a bathroom floor. A post-mortem examination then determined that Pearce had died as a result of a stab wound.
In April, police issued a news release appealing for information in the decades-old cold case.
At the time, police said that they had identified Ronald Thomas Gale, then 22 years old, as a person of interest in the case but had only done so after his death.
rbbm.

[/URL]http://www.websleuths.com/forums/sh...Toronto-20-March-1983&p=13068581#post13068581
 
  • #674
http://www.torontosun.com/2013/02/26/dupont-station-shooter-on-the-loose-a-year-later

Does anyone care to take a crack at this one?

An interesting case just updated by the TPS Hold-Up Squad today.

Catch this guy (woman?!) and perhaps prevent a homicide from happening.

I find it hard to understand the person returning to rob the same place over and over again,
and shooting the unarmed man over nothing.

-It would seem that there is some ulterior motive besides just forcibly stealing money.
- IMHO, the suspect is female. The eyes, height and body shape suggest it. To me anyway.

Update today for this case.
$25K reward.

rbbm.
http://www.cp24.com/news/police-to-...g-of-ttc-employee-at-dupont-station-1.3302542
Police to provide update on 2012 shooting of TTC employee at Dupont Station
image.jpg
One of four photos that depicts a suspect robbing TTC collectors on various dates. Police believe this suspect is responsible for shooting a TTC staffer at Dupont Station on Feb. 26, 2012.

Last Updated Monday, February 27, 2017 11:08AM EST Toronto police are renewing their push for information in a 2012 shooting at a subway station that left one TTC collector seriously injured.
On Feb. 26, 2012, police say a suspect, armed with a handgun, approached a collector’s booth at Dupont Station and demanded cash.
When the TTC employee didn't comply with the demand, police say the suspect started to walk away but then turned and opened fire at the collector’s booth.




Bullets struck the TTC employee in the neck and shoulder and the suspect fled the station empty handed.

“Our clues have kind of dried up. We are really looking for anything that anybody can have that can point us in the right direction.”

Police previously said that they believe the same suspect carried out two other robberies at Dupont Station in 2011.
The suspect, who wore a mask during each of the robberies, has been described as white, either male or female, and heavy set. The suspect is also believed to be left-handed.

“No other crimes have been committed, that we can tell, by this individual anywhere else in the GTA or even in the province of Ontario. We review all the robberies, nothing else has come up. After this shooting, this person has literally disappeared,” Earl said.
“(They) are obviously familiar with the area where these robberies took place, very familiar, because they constantly went back to the same location.”
http://www.citynews.ca/2017/02/27/suspect-still-large-ttc-collector-shooting-dupont-station/
attachment.php

[video=youtube;Jf4mnh46jg0]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jf4mnh46jg0[/video]
 

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  • #675
Nice to "see" you again, dotr!

Thanks for the update.

This is a really odd case. I still believe that the shooter is a woman, and that there is some latent motive besides robbery behind this.
 
  • #676
Tracy Kundinger Murder

Case #: YRP 1975-12772
Location: Simonston Blvd (near German Mills P.S), Thornhill
Date: Thursday, August 21, 1975

Summary: The body of Tracy Kundinger, aged 18 of Thornhill, was located in a park area adjacent to the German Mills Public School, which is located on Simonston Boulevard in Thornhill.

The investigation revealed that Tracy Kundinger worked until 10 p.m. on Wednesday, August 21, 1975 as a lifeguard at the Ottawa Indoor Pool located at 650 Parliament Street, Toronto. Tracy was reported to have been wearing a blue jean jacket over a white T-shirt, blue jeans, and a pair of white shoes when she left the Ottawa Indoor Pool, shortly after 10 p.m. on August 20, 1975.

Tracy was observed walking with friends to the Castlefrank Subway Station, and ultimately took a Don Mills North bus to Steeles Avenue, leaving the bus at 10:50 p.m.

A man who had been the only other passenger of the bus, described as 22 to 24 years of age, 175 to 180 lbs., with sandy, collar-length wavy hair and wearing a white denim jacket and jeans, got off the bus at the same time and was seen to be walking in the same general direction as Tracy.

It is believed that Tracy walked northwest from the intersection of Don Mills Road and Steeles Avenue toward her residence, and across the park area that surrounded German Mills Public School and St. Michael's Catholic Elementary School.

Tracy Kundinger died as a result of asphyxiation.
 
  • #677
Tracy Kundinger Murder

August 22, 1975 Toronto Star A1.jpgAugust 22, 1975 Toronto Star A2.png
 
  • #678
Tracy Kundinger Murder

August 26, 1975 Toronto Star A2.png
 
  • #679
Tracy Kundinger Murder - Composite sketch of suspect

September 10, 1975 The Liberal composite sketch.jpg
 
  • #680

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