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Serial killer victim Ashlee Shingoose's parents to speak at news conference
Serial killer victim Ashlee Shingoose's parents to speak at news conference

CBC

time27-03-2025

  • CBC

Serial killer victim Ashlee Shingoose's parents to speak at news conference

The parents of Ashlee Shingoose, the woman recently identified as the unknown victim of a Winnipeg serial killer, are scheduled to speak about the update involving their daughter at a news conference Thursday morning. CBC News will livestream the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs news conference here at 10 a.m. CST. Theresa and Albert Shingoose are expected to speak alongside Raymond Flett, chief of their home community of St. Theresa Point Anisininew Nation, as well as AMC Grand Chief Kyra Wilson, and Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak Grand Chief Garrison Settee. Shingoose, 30, was last confirmed seen in downtown Winnipeg in March 2022. Investigators believe she was killed that month, before her body was placed in a garbage bin behind a business on Henderson Highway in North Kildonan and taken to Winnipeg's Brady Road landfill. Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew promised at a news conference Wednesday there will be a search for Shingoose's remains. Shingoose was among the four First Nations women killed by Jeremy Skibicki between March and May 2022, along with Morgan Harris, 39, and Marcedes Myran, 26 — both originally from Long Plain First Nation — as well as Rebecca Contois, 24, a member of O-Chi-Chak-Ko-Sipi First Nation. He was convicted last July of four counts of first-degree murder, after a weeks-long trial that heard he targeted vulnerable First Nations women at homeless shelters before killing them and disposing of their remains.

Ashlee Shingoose's father never let go of the idea his missing daughter could be Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe
Ashlee Shingoose's father never let go of the idea his missing daughter could be Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe

CBC

time27-03-2025

  • CBC

Ashlee Shingoose's father never let go of the idea his missing daughter could be Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe

WARNING: This story contains details of violence against Indigenous women. Albert Shingoose's long-held suspicions that his missing daughter might have been the unidentified victim of a Winnipeg serial killer have been confirmed. On Wednesday, Winnipeg police confirmed Ashlee Shingoose, 30, was the first woman killed by Jeremy Skibicki in 2022. The identity of that victim had, until this week, not been confirmed, and she was given the name Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe, or Buffalo Woman, by Indigenous community members. DNA results identified Shingoose as the victim this month, police said at a Wednesday news conference, after Skibicki gave them new information in a December interview. Albert had spent years searching for his daughter, travelling from his home in St. Theresa Point Anisininew Nation to search the streets of Winnipeg, sometimes until 3 or 4 a.m. He was gone for weeks at a time, but went home empty-handed. "I wasn't thinking about being scared or something happening to me, I was thinking of trying to find my daughter," he said. "It was pretty hard." She was one of four First Nations women murdered by Skibicki in Winnipeg in 2022, along with Morgan Harris, 39, and Marcedes Myran, 26 — both originally from Long Plain First Nation — as well as Rebecca Contois, 24, a member of O-Chi-Chak-Ko-Sipi First Nation. Although the identity of his first victim wasn't known at the time, he was convicted of four counts of first-degree murder last July. Police previously said DNA samples taken from Ashlee's family members in early 2023 did not match a DNA profile found on a jacket they believed Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe had worn. But the missing murder victim stayed on Albert's mind. "I'm just thinking about that all the time, that Buffalo Woman … maybe that was her, maybe not. I don't know," he told CBC News in an October 2023 interview. Police said Wednesday they believe Ashlee's remains were taken to the Brady Road landfill in Winnipeg after she was killed in March 2022. At the news conference, Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew promised a search of the landfill for her, and later sang a traditional song for Ashlee at the request of her father, who spoke via speaker phone. WATCH | Premier sings for Ashlee Shingoose: Ashlee Shingoose's father asks premier to sing for family 12 hours ago Duration 2:29 Speaking via phone from St. Theresa Point Anisininew Nation during a news conference Wednesday, Albert Shingoose asked Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew to sing for his daughter, Ashlee, whom Winnipeg police had just announced was the previously unidentified first victim of serial killer Jeremy Skibicki. In his October 2023 interview, Albert expressed hope that as a First Nations person, Kinew — whose government had just been elected — would support a search of Prairie Green landfill for the remains of Harris and Myran. He rejected the reasoning of the former Progressive Conservative government, which pointed to health and safety reasons for its refusal to launch a search. During a leaders' debate before the October 2023 election, then premier Heather Stefanson asked Kinew why he was "willing to put $184 million and Manitoba workers at risk for a search without a guarantee," citing the projected cost of the search. "They talk about money, it's going to cost a lot of money to search that landfill. To me, it's like life is worthless," Albert said in 2023. "Life is precious. I'd like to have my daughter back home and buried in a proper place, not in a landfill." 'She had nowhere to go' Ashlee was from St. Theresa Point Anisininew Nation, in northeastern Manitoba, but moved to Winnipeg around 2016, Albert said. The mother of three was last seen in the city's downtown on March 11, 2022. Albert said a lack of housing in St. Theresa Point forced her to move. He and Ashlee's mother, Theresa, share a small bungalow with eight grandchildren, some sleeping on a couch and in the kitchen. There are at least 300 families on the waitlist for housing in the First Nation, which has an on-reserve population of about 4,000 people, according to the federal government. "If we had more housing … she would've been here, instead of being lost out there," Albert said. Albert said he remembered his daughter as happy, outgoing and a problem solver. But she lost custody of her children while in Winnipeg, and Albert says she became addicted to drugs. "That's when we started losing her, because she had nowhere to go." Her disappearance was hard on the family, he said, and their tragedy was compounded in March 2023, when Ashlee's daughter, Dayna, was identified as one of two 14-year-old girls found dead outside a home in St. Theresa Point. Then chief Elvin Flett said he believed the girls had taken drugs before freezing to death. Alvin said his granddaughter had been depressed about the loss of her mother. "She did miss her mom lots, [and would] always say, 'Grandpa, when are you going out to look for my mom?'" said Alvin. "'Bring her home,' that's what she said to me." Investigators believe Ashlee's remains were taken to the Brady Road landfill in March 2022, based on the time of her death and new information about where her remains were placed, police said Wednesday. The remains of Harris and Myran, left in a different dumpster, were recently discovered following a search that began last December at the Prairie Green landfill, north of Winnipeg. Contois's partial remains were found in garbage bins behind a North Kildonan apartment on May 16, 2022, and more of her remains were found the following month at the Brady Road landfill. When CBC visited Albert in his home in 2023, he hadn't stopped searching for his daughter, or fighting to have the landfill searched — something he said he'd do himself. "I'd go. I don't care if they arrested me. I'd go and do it. I'd go digging in there, and I don't care if the cops take me away from there, no matter what. Because that's my daughter," he said.

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