
Organizer hopes Red Dress Day event will put N.B. cases in 'spotlight'
Natasha Ward of Metepenagiag hopes a local commemoration of Red Dress Day will remind people of missing and murdered Indigenous women from right here in New Brunswick, including Erin Brooks.
Ward has organized an event on Tuesday in Saint John at the Boys and Girls Club to commemorate the annual day of remembering missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.
Brooks of Sitansisk First Nation, also known as St. Mary's, has been missing for more than three years and her mother Laurie Brooks will attend this year's event. Ward said that she "wanted to get Erin's case back in the spotlight" and "give support back to Laurie."
Police have said that Brooks was likely the victim of a homicide.
"You read about it, you see it on TV, and you know, you feel bad for these people, but you don't truly understand until you have to go through it yourself," said Amy Paul, Brooks's sister.
"It is awful."
Brooks, a mother of four, would have celebrated her 40th birthday this year, said her mother.
When asked about the case, Ward said it's heart-wrenching "but I just want her to know that we're here to support her and we'll be there with her."
She said the case "seems like it's at a standstill" so she wants to "put her face out there, put the case out there," and try to get it back in the spotlight.
The value of a life
"When you see the red dresses hanging in the trees, it's very haunting, it catches your attention," Ward said. "It helps to call back the spirits of our loved ones."
She also said the red handprint Indigenous women often wear on their faces represents the silencing they encounter.
Ward was moved to get involved in Red Dress Day when a controversy about missing women erupted in Manitoba, she said. The provincial government and police initially refused to search a Winnipeg-area landfill after learning that a serial killer may have dumped the bodies of missing Indigenous women there.
"Our lives are not put at the same value as others," Ward said. "When the landfill cases came out, it really affected me as an Indigenous woman to be disregarded like that and the fight that was put out there to not search for these women was insane," she said. "Mothers were begging to have this landfill search."
When the landfill was searched, the remains of three women were found. Buffalo Woman, or Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe, was an unknown victim until she was identified as Ashlee Shingoose of St. Theresa Point First Nation in March.
Red Dress Day has been observed on May 5 since 2010 as a day to honour and remember missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls and two-spirit people.
Ward said that she wants people to "get familiar with the 231 calls to justice" and have a better understanding of the issues that Indigenous people face, such as inter-generational trauma.
These calls for justice are laid out in the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls report. The document outlining the calls for justice is available on the National Inquiry Into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls website.
When the inquiry issued the calls for justice, it included a demand for a national action plan to deal with violence against Indigenous women, girls and 2SLGBTQ+ people, and a system of annual reporting on the plan's progress.
Ward said she organized Tuesday's event in Saint John to keep the issue on the front burner.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Toronto Star
5 hours ago
- Toronto Star
Protest held at a Nova Scotia RCMP detachment over Indigenous-owned cannabis stores
Organizers behind a protest held at a Nova Scotia RCMP detachment say police action against Indigenous-owned cannabis dispensaries represents a continued attack on Mi'kmaq sovereignty. Thomas Durfee says a crowd of more than 100 people gathered at the RCMP detachment in Millbrook First Nation to protest Thursday after Mounties executed a search warrant at a cannabis store in the community and arrested one man.


Winnipeg Free Press
5 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Protest held at a Nova Scotia RCMP detachment over Indigenous-owned cannabis stores
Organizers behind a protest held at a Nova Scotia RCMP detachment say police action against Indigenous-owned cannabis dispensaries represents a continued attack on Mi'kmaq sovereignty. Thomas Durfee says a crowd of more than 100 people gathered at the RCMP detachment in Millbrook First Nation to protest Thursday after Mounties executed a search warrant at a cannabis store in the community and arrested one man. Durfee says the peaceful protest involved free lobster, music and speeches from matriarchs in the community. Millbrook First Nation council member Chris Googoo told the crowd it's important to support the shop owner who is exercising his treaty rights by operating a Mi'kmaq 'truckhouse,' which is a traditional trading post. The Millbrook First Nation member says the community has asked the RCMP not to enforce the Cannabis Act as it works to develop its own independent regulations for selling cannabis. The RCMP said in a statement Friday that police executed a search warrant at 'an illegal cannabis storefront' on Wednesday and seized a quantity of cannabis and unstamped tobacco. Police say the one man who was arrested was released and will not be charged, but that investigators anticipate others will face charges as evidence is collected. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 3, 2025.


Vancouver Sun
3 days ago
- Vancouver Sun
Killer who raped, decapitated 12-year-old girl has been paroled: police
According to Halifax Regional Police, 73-year-old high-risk offender Douglas Worth is living in Dartmouth. Worth, originally from the Pictou County area of Nova Scotia, was released after serving 35 years of a federal life sentence for the December 1987 second-degree murder of Trina Campbell in Brampton, Ont. National Post has contacted the Parole Board of Canada to obtain a copy of their decision to release Worth, who police say can have no contact with children or his victims, no drugs or alcohol, and must report all relationships. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Worth has a criminal history dating back to 1968 that includes break-ins, motor vehicle theft and the 1978 rape of an Indigenous girl in Ontario, for which he was sentenced and served eight years, earning his release in June of 1987, about seven months before he killed Campbell. The circumstances surrounding that murder are detailed in multiple news articles from the time and are also explored in a 2005 episode of the television series Crime Stories. In the show, it notes that shortly before his release, Worth had said he planned to kill people and go on a rampage as retribution for his incarceration. Despite those concerns, he had served his limited sentence, and nothing in Canadian law at the time established safeguards around release. After Worth got out in the spring, however, police tracked him to Edmonton, where he reconnected with a woman named Mary Kelly and her teenage son from a different relationship, Shawn. Police said they lost track of Worth soon after, but believed he returned to Ontario. Police said Campbell, a Metis girl who'd had a troubled life, was living in a group home in the fall of 1987 after having run away from foster parents on several occasions. When she failed to return to the facility on Dec. 11, they thought at first she might have run away again. A months-long investigation into her disappearance ensued, but police didn't have any credible leads by the time February rolled around. Despite no evidence of foul play, the file was handed off to homicide detectives Edward Toye and Len Favreau. Meanwhile, Peel police were completely unaware that Worth was living in a downtown boarding house close to where Campbell was last seen by her school bus driver. 'We had no idea this sadistic predator had moved into our area,' Inspector Rod Piukkala said on Crime Stories. Authorities later learned Worth was soon rejoined by the Kellys, and in March of 1988, he asked Mary to rent a vehicle and accompany him so that he could move evidence related to an undisclosed crime. 'He left the car with a hockey bag and went into this ravine area. He then was seen by Mary to come from there carrying this hockey bag that was now laden with something,' assistant Crown prosecutor Al O'Marra said on the show. The two drove about an hour north of Brampton, where Mary said Worth took the bag into the woods and came back with it empty. Back in Brampton, he then ordered 14-year-old Shawn to clean up a stain left in the car's trunk. After the Kellys moved with Worth to his home province in April, Shawn asked his school's guidance counsellor and Stellarton Police for help escaping the violence he was experiencing at home, according to a 2005 article in The Evening News in New Glasgow. During that chat, Sgt. Hugh Muir, knowing Worth was wanted in connection with crimes in Ontario, asked Shawn about Brampton specifically, prompting the teenager to recount the stain story and that he had heard Worth tell other family members that he had killed a man there, not a girl. 'We were both stunned,' Muir said of himself and the guidance counsellor. 'We had no inkling whatsoever that this was coming.' Armed with new information, Toye and Favreau located the rental car with the dark stain. Testing quickly revealed it to be not only human blood, but decomposed human blood. They also discovered the rare blood type is common among Indigenous persons, leading police to think there could be a 'loose chance' of a Campbell connection. The Peel detectives travelled to N.S. to begin surveilling Worth, but had little evidence to act on. Before long, Sharon and Wade Lewis, Worth's sister and brother-in-law, agreed to interviews, during which they spoke about the murder admission overheard by Shawn and Worth's growing paranoia that someone would find the body and connect it to him. 'They advised us that Doug had approached them requesting assistance to get back to Brampton so that he could retrieve the head of the victim,' Favreau said on Crime Stories. 'Doug told them that if you can get the head of the victim, it would prevent anyone from being able to identify the victim.' Armed with that knowledge, police devised a plan whereby they would provide money and a rented car to Sharon that she would give to Worth and urge him to hit the road and deal with his problem. Worth took the bait, and police discreetly tailed him back to Brampton, where he and Mary arrived on the night of May 7 under constant surveillance. Worth gave police the slip overnight, but officers fanned out and eventually located the pair exiting the woods. 'I'll never forget that sight and that immense wave of relief that washed over me when we saw the car parked there and saw Doug coming out of the bush carrying a gym bag. He didn't seem to pay us any mind,' Peel Det. Mike Cederberg told producers for Crime Stories. To eliminate any chance of an alibi that he had found the remains and was returning them to police, officers allowed Worth to drive past two police stations before stopping him in Brampton. In the gym bag, forensics officers found a decomposing skull wrapped in garbage bags, which they soon confirmed was that of the missing girl. The rest of her body was recovered from the area north of the city later that day. 'He broke her leg, fractured her skull, her body was butchered, he snapped off her forearms and dumped her body,' O'Marra told the court during Worth's 1990 trial, according to the Windsor Star. When first apprehended, Worth told police he'd grabbed Campbell in a supermarket, and raped and beat her before leaving her to die in a ravine. During the trial, however, he pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder. Defence lawyer Damien Frost asked the jury to accept an insanity plea, arguing Worth was hallucinating and believed Campbell was a female prison guard from his previous time in prison. It took jurors under an hour to reject that argument and present their guilty verdict to Justice Coulter Osbourne, who handed Worth a life sentence with no chance of parole for 23 years. Worth unleashed a confusing and contradictory rant after his sentencing, per the Star. 'I did not kill her,' he said before adding, 'I'm not saying I'm not to blame for the cause of her death.' He went on to add that people who commit crimes like this against children 'should be shot.' 'That goes for me, too,' he said. He also told O'Marra that he is 'not the cold-hearted son of a b—-' he was made out to be during the trial. 'They say I'm mentally ill, but I don't want to go on living like this if there's no hope. . . I'll put a bullet through my head.' Halifax police said its advisory this week is meant to inform the public of Worth's presence and is 'not intended to encourage any form of vigilante activity or other unreasonable conduct.' High-Risk Offender Notification: Douglas Worth Halifax Regional Police is advising citizens, particularly those in Dartmouth, that a high-risk offender is residing in the community. Douglas Worth, 73, is a federal offender who has been serving a life sentence for second-degree… Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here .