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Search of Manitoba landfill for women's remains ends, dig at second site to start

Search of Manitoba landfill for women's remains ends, dig at second site to start

Toronto Star4 days ago
WINNIPEG - The search of a Winnipeg-area landfill for the remains of two slain First Nations women has concluded with a new search soon set to begin at a different site for another victim.
The Manitoba government announced Thursday that crews finished looking last week through the Prairie Green landfill, just north of Winnipeg, for remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran. They were among four First Nations women murdered by serial killer Jeremy Skibicki in 2022.
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As one Manitoba landfill search for First Nations women's remains ends, another is set to begin
As one Manitoba landfill search for First Nations women's remains ends, another is set to begin

CBC

time3 days ago

  • CBC

As one Manitoba landfill search for First Nations women's remains ends, another is set to begin

Social Sharing Donna Bartlett's family is still coming to terms with the end of a months-long search of a Winnipeg-area landfill for her granddaughter, after it wrapped up last week with only some of Marcedes Myran's remains located. "It was, I guess, hurtful," Bartlett said, adding searchers were able to find only about 15 per cent of her granddaughter's total remains since the process began in December. "I would have liked them to continue searching, but [it was] because they haven't found anything I think in about a month that they said … they were done." Myran was one of four First Nations women killed by Jeremy Skibicki in Winnipeg in 2022. Skibicki was convicted of first-degree murder last year in her death and the deaths of Morgan Harris, Rebecca Contois and Ashlee Shingoose. Both Myran, 26, and Harris, 39, were originally from Long Plain First Nation in south-central Manitoba, while Shingoose, 30, was from St. Theresa Point Anisininew Nation in northeastern Manitoba. Contois, 24, was a member of O-Chi-Chak-Ko-Sipi First Nation, also known as Crane River, on the western shore of Lake Manitoba. While some remains belonging to Harris and Myran were found at the Winnipeg-area Prairie Green landfill earlier this year, Contois's partial remains were found in May 2022 in a garbage bin near Skibicki's apartment in Winnipeg's North Kildonan area, and more were found the following month at the Brady Road landfill. That Winnipeg landfill is also where Shingoose's remains are now believed to be. Bartlett said she feels torn as the search for her granddaughter's remains ends, but she knows it means those resources will move to soon start searching for Shingoose. "I still appreciate them finding some of her. They actually did it," Bartlett said in an interview Friday. "It's kind of heartbreaking, and at the same time, it's kind of good that they're going to search for the other woman." Albert Shingoose said he's trying to stay strong as the process gets underway to start searching for his daughter, who was identified as the previously-unknown victim in the case earlier this year. But he's hoping to push the province to also search the Brady landfill for the remains of Tanya Nepinak, whose remains were believed to have been taken to that site after she went missing at age 31 over a decade ago. A search for Nepinak's remains was launched in October 2012, but it was cancelled after six days with no evidence located. "I know how it feels to lose a daughter," Shingoose said in an interview in Winnipeg, where he and his family are staying after wildfires forced them out of their homes in St. Theresa Point. "For so many years that they're not looking for her, and the family [has] been asking for help." Melissa Robinson knows how it feels to lose a loved one, too — her cousin, Harris, was the other woman whose remains were recently found in the Prairie Green landfill alongside Myran's. Now, she said she hopes to use her family's experience to help families like the Shingooses. "What they primarily need is just people there. You know, people there to hold them up, right, when they're feeling like they just can't do it anymore," Robinson said. "All we can do now as a community is be there to support them like the community supported us." As Bartlett and Robinson's families prepare to finally lay their loved ones to rest, Shingoose said he hopes the search for his daughter's remains begins soon. The province announced Thursday that the search of the Prairie Green landfill for Harris's and Myran's remains officially ended on July 9, followed by private ceremonies with the families on July 14 and 15 alongside Premier Wab Kinew, members of the search team and other community supporters. The update came months after the women's partial remains were discovered at the landfill in February, though workers remained at the site after that in an effort to find more of their remains, Kinew said previously. With the Prairie Green search concluded, specialized equipment and personnel will soon move to the Brady Road landfill to continue the search for Shingoose's remains, the province said. As one Manitoba landfill search for women's remains ends, another is set to begin 18 minutes ago Searchers are expected to soon start looking for the remains of Ashlee Shingoose in a Winnipeg landfill, after finding remains belonging to Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran in a landfill north of the city earlier this year. They were among four First Nations women murdered by a serial killer in 2022.

Politics Insider: Canada's Supreme Court tightens rules for youth offender sentencing
Politics Insider: Canada's Supreme Court tightens rules for youth offender sentencing

Globe and Mail

time3 days ago

  • Globe and Mail

Politics Insider: Canada's Supreme Court tightens rules for youth offender sentencing

Hello and welcome to Politics Insider. Let's take a look at what happened this week. Canada's Supreme Court has made it more difficult for judges to sentence youth offenders convicted of serious crimes, such as first-degree murder, as adults for their actions. David Ebner reports that, in two related decisions today, the top court provided added detail on how the law should be interpreted by the lower courts. In Canada, few young people are convicted of such serious crimes, and thereafter sentenced as adults, but the decisions are still likely to represent important precedents in how lower courts decide these cases in the future. In the primary ruling written by Justice Nicholas Kasirer, in a 7-2 majority, the top court said the Crown must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a young person does not merit the presumption of diminished blame for their crime on account of their youth. Also this week, a landmark meeting between Mark Carney and First Nations leaders ended with a divergence of views on display that signalled a long road ahead for the Prime Minister's plan to fast-track major projects. Emily Haws and Stephanie Levitz report that some leaders emerged with a sense that Carney had listened thoughtfully to their points of view. Others said the meeting was too disorganized and last minute to be considered meaningful dialogue in response to the central concern: whether First Nations rights will be respected and protected alongside the implementation of Bill C-5. The law requires consultation with Indigenous peoples to determine which projects would be deemed in the national interest, and to develop the conditions under which chosen projects could proceed. Canada Post union calls on employees to reject latest offer: The Canadian Union of Postal Workers says the agreement would erode job security and pension benefits in the long-run and expand Canada Post's part-time workforce at the expense of full-time jobs. Army removes commanding officer after alleged racist, sexual social-media posts by soldiers: Army commander Lieutenant-General Michael Wright said he was taking steps to address the 'inappropriate behaviour' of Canadian Army members involved in the 'Blue Hackle Mafia' Facebook group. China says Canada's steel crackdown violates WTO rules: The Chinese embassy in Ottawa criticized duties Canada slapped on Chinese imported steel this week, saying they violate World Trade Organization rules and disrupt the global trade order. Ontario Progressive Conservatives schedule convention for the same time as Poilievre's leadership review: The duelling conventions highlight the growing distance between the two parties that was laid bare during the recent federal election. Ottawa looking at ways to `kickstart' housing market, Housing Minister says: 'We've got to look at how to best support and intervene where needed,' Gregor Robertson told The Globe and Mail, responding to a downturn in the residential real-estate sector. Documents used to assess asylum cases fail to account for Trump's edicts, advocates say: Lawyers representing refugee claimants and migrants facing deportation from Canada are calling for an urgent update for the official package of documents on conditions in the U.S. Ottawa's massive defence spending set to transform industry: The federal government's focus on military spending presents an opportunity for major new lines of business and lucrative contracts. Alberta Premier dismisses report finding province complicated Jasper wildfire response: Today, Danielle Smith played down findings from the report, which was commissioned by the municipality of Jasper and examined perspectives from firefighters and other people involved in the effort against the wind-whipped conflagrations that devastated at least one-third of the buildings in the town. B.C. Premier shakes up cabinet: David Eby says this week's cabinet changes, which include former housing minister Ravi Kahlon taking over as jobs minister, are a strategic shift in order to focus on jobs and the economy. New Business Council VP: Theo Argitis, the former Ottawa bureau chief for Bloomberg News, has joined the Business Council of Canada as a senior vice president of policy. Most recently, he was editor-at-large at The Hub, a digital news outlet. Minister on the Road: Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne is in the South African city of Durban today, concluding two days of meetings of G20 and G7 finance ministers and central bank governors. Also along for the meetings: Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem. Premiers meet: Canada's premiers and territorial leaders are meeting in the town of Huntsville, about 200 kilometres north of Toronto, next week. Members of the Council of the Federation will gather from Monday to Wednesday. Items on the agenda include Canada-U.S. relations, national security and sovereignty. Prime Minister Mark Carney is also set to join the gathering on Tuesday, making it a meeting of first ministers. New government rep in Senate: Prime Minister Mark Carney has appointed former Quebec cabinet minister Pierre Moreau, now a senator, as Government Representative in the Senate, replacing Marc Gold, who retired from the Senate last month after reaching the mandatory retirement age of 75. Who was the first leader of the Green Party of Canada? Scroll to the bottom of this newsletter for the answer. A shrinking population is hardly what the country needs right now When a wildfire threatened my hometown, I realized the places you love can disappear in an instant Got a news tip that you'd like us to look into? E-mail us at tips@ Need to share documents securely? Reach out via SecureDrop. The answer to today's question: Trevor Hancock, a public-health physician and professor emeritus at the School of Public Health at the University of Victoria. Under Hancock's leadership, the party ran a total 60 candidates in the 1984 federal election. This was the election that saw Brian Mulroney lead the Progressive Conservatives to winning the most seats in Canadian political history - 211 in a Commons with 281 in total. The Greens did not win any seats, and earned 0.21 per cent of the vote.

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