logo

Death of inmate at Regional Psychiatric Centre closes book on horrific 1982 murder of Regina professor

CBC30-04-2025

Joe Duffy ambushed and murdered on highway near Kenaston, Sask.
Warning: this story contains details of violence and sexual assault.
The death of Robert Wapuchakoos at the Regional Psychiatric Centre on April 27 concludes a story that began with a brutal slaying that sent a shock wave through Saskatchewan in the summer of 1982.
Joseph Duffy was a University of Regina education professor working on his Ph.D. at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. On June 30, 1982, a hot and sunny Wednesday, the 51-year-old was commuting home on Highway 11 to Regina in his yellow Pontiac Lemans.
About 10 kilometres south of Kenaston, Sask., 84 kilometres south of Saskatoon, Duffy came across a car broken down on the side of the road. Two women were waving for help and Duffy pulled over to give assistance.
Once he stopped, two men — Robert Ironchild and Brian Obey — emerged from the ditch where they had been hiding and overpowered Duffy.
"For his efforts he was attacked and taken at knife point, in his own car, to a farmer's field. He was slashed with the knife and forced from his car. The four then chased him with the car and ran him over, and over," Duffy's son, Mike, wrote in a letter to his MP in 1997.
Ironchild drove the car for next several days before asking a relative to dispose of it.
The murder triggered a provincewide manhunt that ended one week later in Regina when the police tactical squad arrested Ironchild in a house after a two-hour standoff. At his trial in early 1983, Ironchild, then 27, was convicted of first-degree murder, thanks in part to his co-accused testifying that Ironchild was the one who stabbed Duffy and then killed him with his own car. The co-accused, Brian Obey, was later stabbed to death in Regina.
Former Saskatchewan premier Allan Blakeney and Saskatchewan Chief Justice Edward Bayda served as honourary pallbearers at Duffy's funeral. Duffy had been on the national executive of the Canadian Council of Teachers of English since 1975, and on the executive of the Saskatchewan Opera Guild.
Ironchild was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years. While in prison in Drumheller, Alta., he changed his name to Robert Wapuchakoos.
Wapuchakoos was released on full parole in 2007. In 2022, he was re-arrested and placed at the Regional Psychiatric Centre on an indeterminate sentence.
Wapuchakoos died at the Saskatoon prison hospital on April 27 of apparent natural causes, according to the Correctional Service of Canada. He was 69.
A pattern of trouble
Parole Board of Canada documents detail how Wapuchakoos never really fully re-integrated into society after serving his 25-year sentence.
He was released on day parole in 2005 and then full parole in 2007. He was brought back in and released again twice from 2009 to 2013.
"In 2014, you were arrested and returned to custody and your release was eventually revoked," the documents said.
"You admitted to overdosing on pain medication and 'blacking out.'"
Wapuchakoos was granted his second full parole in 2019 with a handful of specific conditions, including staying within 55 kilometres of the Piapot First Nation, 30 kilometres northeast of Regina.
"Documentation indicates you struggled in the community," the parole board noted.
He smoked marijuana without a prescription, planned to buy a car in violation of his conditions, "and you were also reported to keep a kitchen knife nearby when talking to people such as your parole supervisor."
Formal warnings to change his behaviour were issued, but his release was not suspended until May 2022. That's when police told his parole supervisor that he was under investigation for three sexual assault allegations involving "three elderly women with diminished mental capacity due to dementia."
Wapuchakoos was taken back into custody and placed in an all-male care facility, but was moved after complaints of inappropriate behaviour toward female staff.
He was eventually moved to the Regional Psychiatric Centre in Saskatoon on an indeterminate sentence, because "it is the Board's opinion that you will present an undue risk to society if released on full parole."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man arrested after carjacking, dangerous driving spree causing multiple accidents
Man arrested after carjacking, dangerous driving spree causing multiple accidents

CTV News

time03-06-2025

  • CTV News

Man arrested after carjacking, dangerous driving spree causing multiple accidents

A man was arrested this weekend after stealing a truck and going on a dangerous driving spree through downtown Edmonton. Police say downtown officers were flagged down on Sunday evening by a person who had just been carjacked near 102 Avenue and 96 Street. It was reported that a man jumped into the bed of the person's truck. When the driver exited his vehicle, the man attacked him, got into the driver's seat and drove away. As a result of the assault, the person was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. It was reported that following the assault and theft of the truck, the suspect caused multiple collisions. No other injuries were reported. Tactical officers located the stolen truck in a parking lot near the University of Alberta Hospital where they arrested the suspect. He was treated in hospital for non-life-threatening injuries sustained in an earlier altercation during the spree, said police. The 27-year-old man has been charged with aggravated assault, robbery, dangerous driving, three counts of failing to remain at the scene of a collision and a breach of a release order.

8 new peace officers to hit Edmonton streets
8 new peace officers to hit Edmonton streets

CTV News

time28-05-2025

  • CTV News

8 new peace officers to hit Edmonton streets

Eight new community peace officer recruits received their orders to serve the City of Edmonton on May 28, 2025. (Sean McClune/CTV News Edmonton) In a city hall celebration Wednesday afternoon, eight new community peace officer recruits received their orders to serve the City of Edmonton. Three of the recruits will support transit peace officers and five will support the University of Alberta, NAIT, MacEwan University and Covenant Health. In a statement, Brooke Hilborn, the city's acting chief bylaw officer and branch manager for community standards, wished the new recruits success. 'These recruits have trained hard over the past few weeks to earn their certificates, and I know they will all move into their careers to serve with great professionalism and empathy, making our communities safer and stronger,' said Hilborn. Officers received city-mandated training on Indigenous awareness, mental health awareness, de-escalation techniques and how to best work with youth and Edmontonians experiencing homelessness on top of regular seven-week training regulated by the provincial Ministry of Public Safety and Emergency Services. Edmonton peace officers focus on specific types of regulatory enforcement including commercial vehicle monitoring, vehicles for hire, downtown patrolling and community standards such as illegal dumping and littering.

Co-owners of Regina vehicle dealership charged with money laundering
Co-owners of Regina vehicle dealership charged with money laundering

CBC

time23-05-2025

  • CBC

Co-owners of Regina vehicle dealership charged with money laundering

An investigation into money laundering in Regina, which began after a drug bust that saw two members of the University of Regina Rams football team arrested and charged, has led to charges against the co-owners of a local vehicle dealership, police say. Aggrey Kwesi Buaben Fynn, 42, and Stephanie Dawn Fynn, 38, both of Regina, were arrested on Thursday and are jointly charged with fraud over $5,000 and laundering proceeds of crime. In February, a drug trafficking investigation led to police searches in Regina, Alameda, and Frobisher, Sask., and resulted in the seizure of 7.5 kilograms of fentanyl and over $150,000 in cash. Guns, ammunition, vehicles, and other drugs were also seized. Five people were arrested, including Rams football players Tarick Polius and Michael Jourdan, both of Toronto. The players were charged with commission of an offence for a criminal organization and trafficking in a controlled substance (fentanyl), among other charges. The University of Regina confirmed Polius and Jourdan were student athletes enrolled at the university before they were suspended. During the four-month investigation that led to those arrests, Regina police say they uncovered information suggesting that a local man was involved in laundering money for a drug trafficking operation. Police searches were carried out at the man's home and "businesses involved in vehicle sales and rentals," which police say are co-owned by a woman. Police declined to name the businesses. They allege the searches uncovered evidence of additional, unrelated money laundering and fraud totalling millions of dollars. The accused made their first court appearances on the charges in Regina Friday morning.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store