CANADA Canada - Kimberley McAndrews, 19, Halifax, NS, 12 Aug 1989

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[h=1]Family of local woman missing for 28 years still searching for answers[/h]
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19-year-old Kimberley McAndrews disappeared on August 12, 1989 after leaving the Canadian Tire store on Quinpool road at the end of her shift at 4:20 p.m.

Her family said she seemed to vanish. Her bank accounts were left untouched and all her possessions were left behind.

Kimberley’s sister, Megan Adams, said police were unable to find any trace of Kimberley despite it being a fairly public area.
“On a sunny sunny day in August,” she said. “4:20 [in the afternoon] there was always lots of people around that area, the back entrance to Canadian Tire, the parking lot area is still very similar there.”

Adams said her sisters and boyfriend were planning to see some buskers that day but they could not find Kimberley when they went to pick her up.
http://www.news957.com/community/20...man-missing-28-years-still-searching-answers/
 
Happened to come across this interesting article from 2010 which referenced Kimberly and some other missing girls in NS. Lengthy article.
http://www.c2cjournal.ca/2010/06/canadas-sex-traffickers-c2cs-investigative-report/
[h=1]Canada’s Sex Traffickers: C2C’s Investigative Report[/h] By: Tamara Cherry on June 15, 2010 |

It has been more than twenty years since Kimberly Ann McAndrew vanished after leaving her cashier job at a Canadian Tire in Halifax.

It was August 12, 1989 and in the months that followed, a small handful of local authorities would come to believe that the 19-year-old daughter of a retired RCMP officer had been kidnapped by pimps from the small community of North Preston. The rural cluster of dead-end roads about a half-hour northeast of Halifax was, as it seemingly continues to be, a largely ignored breeding ground for gangsters that cooked up a specialty in running girls.

Nearly 1,800 kilometres away, in what was becoming the epicenter of pimp crackdowns, Toronto Police Juvenile Task Force head Dave Perry was skeptical of the theory brewing among his East Coast counterparts. Girls aren’t just abducted into this game, Perry thought. He had seen how it worked in Toronto: Seduction, coercion, the boyfriend-girlfriend relationship that convinces vulnerable teens that they are fighting for corner space and selling their bodies for the good of the relationship.

Perry’s team had identified what they called The Triangle: Girls and young women were moved between Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal at the hands of their pimps who took every penny earned on the corner. In the early 1990s, Nova Scotia became part of that equation.

“In Toronto, we were hearing a lot about these Halifax pimps and how violent they are and how they’re taking girls, moving them all across Canada, down to the United States,” Perry recalls.

Halifax RCMP Insp. Brad Sullivan was a constable when he and his partner took the 1989 disappearance of Kimberly Ann McAndrew and pushed the Nova Scotia pimping problem into the spotlight.

“We really saw or had information that really led us to believe that it was something that needed to be looked at,” Sullivan says.
Girls aren’t just abducted into this game, Perry thought. He had seen how it worked in Toronto: Seduction, coercion, the boyfriend-girlfriend relationship that convinces vulnerable teens that they are fighting for corner space and selling their bodies for the good of the relationship. Perry’s team had identified what they called The Triangle: Girls and young women were moved between Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal at the hands of their pimps who took every penny earned on the corner. In the early 1990s, Nova Scotia became part of that equation.

“In Toronto, we were hearing a lot about these Halifax pimps and how violent they are and how they’re taking girls, moving them all across Canada, down to the United States,” Perry recalls.
Perry was sitting at home one September afternoon, hours ahead of a planned press conference with King’s mother, when he received a phone call that would solidify much of what he had heard about Nova Scotia pimps. A teenaged girl had just walked into the police station, terrified, saying she had been abducted in Montreal by pimps from North Preston and that she and others were being forced to prostitute in Toronto.

The teen's story led Perry’s team to two side-by-side rooms in a downtown hotel where they found a handful of Nova Scotia girls. “They were telling us about these pimps from North Preston,” he says. “We were told they were armed with a handgun and they had a stun gun they used on the girls.”
 
Kimberly McAndrew
DEAD WRONG


Kimberly McAndrew
Missing person, presumed homicide
Status: Unsolved
Age last seen: 19
"Kimberly grew up in rural Parrsboro, the daughter of Cyril McAndrew, an RCMP cop. She was a small, pretty 19-year-old woman, still wearing braces, who came to the city to attend Dalhousie University. She shared an apartment with two of her sisters on Maxwell Avenue, in the far North End of Halifax near CFB Willow Park. She got a job at Canadian Tire on Quinpool Road.

On Saturday, August 12, 1989, Kimberly had to work, but she had made plans for after: at five o’clock, her sister, her sister’s boyfriend, and her own boyfriend, also from Parrsboro, were to pick her up at work and go out to celebrate her boyfriend’s birthday. But for some reason Kimberly clocked out early, at 4:20, and was never seen again.

Kimberly was “a pure victim,” reported Stephen Kimber. 29 “She didn’t do anything to deserve this,” Tom Martin told Reader’s Digest. 30 Kimberly’s “story was poignant for much of society, especially the middle class, of which she was a member, and marked the pinnacle of the moral panic,” noted a student thesis. 31

And Kimberly’s family and supporters had the skills and connections to keep attention on her story. After Kimberly’s disappearance, her sisters stapled posters all over town and took out ads in newspapers. Cyril McAndrew worked his police contacts to pressure investigators, who were more than willing to help a fellow cop. Reporters were receptive to the story of the quintessential Canadian girl gone missing, and in the years since, hundreds of articles and media reports have been published about Kimberly’s disappearance.

Everyone wanted Kimberly’s case solved. Her family wanted it solved, the public wanted it solved, the cops wanted it solved. And so in 1995, in one of the periodic police re-investigations of cold cases, Kimberly’s file was assigned to detective Dave MacDonald, the same cop who three years later would arrest Glen Assoun for the murder of Brenda Way."
 
Bumping, it is high time that Kimberly is returned to her family.
Rewards for Major Unsolved Crimes | novascotia.ca
Kimberly Ann McANDREW
KMcANDREW.jpg


Missing Person
DOB: 17/07/1970


"The Government of the Province of Nova Scotia is offering rewards of up to one hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person(s) responsible for the disappearance of Kimberly Ann McANDREW.

Kimberly McANDREW has been missing since August 12, 1989. At 04:20 pm she left her place of employment, Canadian Tire Ltd. at 6203 Quinpool Road in Halifax, where she was employed as a cashier.

There were unconfirmed reports that Miss McANDREW was last seen at the Gardenia Flower Shop in Penhorn Mall in Dartmouth. She was identified by an employee at the flower shop as having bought a balloon and a rose. At the time of her disappearance, she was wearing pleated, ankle-length navy cotton slacks with slash pockets in front and one pocket in the back, a white, short-sleeved “Esprit” t-shirt with red and green squares, a navy cotton oversize cardigan, and jade green flat-heeled slip-on loafers.

Any person with information regarding the person(s) responsible for the disappearance of Kimberly Ann McANDREW should call the Rewards for Major Unsolved Crimes Program at 1-888-710-9090.

The reward is payable in Canadian funds and will be apportioned as deemed just by the Minister of Justice for the Province of Nova Scotia. Employees of law enforcement and correctional agencies are not eligible to collect this reward".
 
Missing over 30 years...
Kimberly Ann McANDREW

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Kimberly Anne McAndrew
Missing since August 12, 1989 from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Classification: Non-Family Abduction

Vital Statistics
    • Date Of Birth: January 17, 1970
    • Age at Time of Disappearance: 19 years old
    • Height and Weight at Time of Disappearance: 5'5", 110 lbs
    • Distinguishing Characteristics: White female. Blonde hair; brown eyes. Tanned complexion.
    • Marks, Scars: Slight scar on bridge of nose
    • Dentals: McAndrew wore braces at the time of her disappearance.
    • Clothing: Pleated, ankle-length navy cotton slacks with slash pockets in front and one pocket in the back, a white, short-sleeved Esprit t-shirt with red and green squares, a navy cotton, oversize cardigan, and jade green, flat-heeled slip-on loafers.
Circumstances of Disappearance
On August 12, 1989 Kimberly McAndrew punched the clock at 16:21, walked out the back door of the Canadian Tire store on Quinpool Road in Halifax and vanished. McAndrew was working for the summer as a cashier at the store. Her sister and friends were to pick her up when she finished work at five. But McAndrew's supervisor told her that she could leave early. The store was about a 15-minute walk from the apartment where she lived. When they left to pick her up, McAndrew's sister and friends drove the same route to the store that she would have taken had she walked home. There was no sign of her. Her bank account was never touched, and her clothes weren’t taken from her home.
She was a Dalhousie University undergrad at the time of her disappearance.
Foul play is suspected.

Investigators
If you have any information on this case, please contact:
Halifax Regional Police
800-222-8477

You may remain anonymous if you wish.

NCIC Number: M-440988476
Please refer to this number when contacting any agency with information regarding this case.

Source Information:
Halifax Regional Police
Child CyberSEARCH Canada
Readers Digest
Global National 10/2/06
The Doe Network: Case File 29DFNS
https:///forum/index.php?threads/ki...-from-halifax-ns-12-august-1989-age-19.11013/


 
I'm from Halifax and I think about this case every time I go past the Canadian Tire that she worked at. I really don't find the supposed sighting of her at the flower shop at Penhorn credible at all. It makes zero sense to go over from Halifax to Dartmouth just to go to some random flower shop imo.
 
I'm from Halifax and I think about this case every time I go past the Canadian Tire that she worked at. I really don't find the supposed sighting of her at the flower shop at Penhorn credible at all. It makes zero sense to go over from Halifax to Dartmouth just to go to some random flower shop imo.
Welcome to Ws itskmac!
You may be right about the flower shop, the retired detective does not think KM made it very far from the Can. Tire parking lot.
Aug 12 2019 rbbm.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/kimberly-mcandrew-30-years-1.5244420
"At around 4:20 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 12, 1989, the 19-year-old left her shift. Martin said McAndrew had plans to go to the Halifax Busker Festival with her boyfriend and her family that evening.
He said he doesn't think she made it far from the Canadian Tire because there weren't any confirmed sightings of her."

"Whatever happened, I believe took place in that parking lot," said Martin.

While she was reportedly spotted at the Gardenia Flower Shop at the Penhorn Mall in Dartmouth, Martin doubts she would have gone to Dartmouth after her shift, based on what he learned about the young woman throughout the investigation.

"That wasn't Kim's way," he said.

"She was not adventurous, and for her to go to Dartmouth on her own would have been an adventure. And that's just not what Kim would have done when she had plans that evening."

 
September 2019
The Disappearance of Kimberly McAndrew — The Nighttime Podcast
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"The students who descend on Halifax each year come from far and wide, but despite the depth of their diversity, there is at least one thing they all have in common.

It's a dark brooding thing that dwells in the pits of their parent’s stomachs.

Luckily, it's easily ignored with the simple thought "that stuff doesn't happen in Halifax" or "my kid is too smart for that".

But, as a tragic few have learned, ignoring it is about as effective as covering your eyes to avoid an oncoming train.

Nightmares do come true, and they often happen to good people.

One such nightmare is the 1989 disappearance of then 19 year old Kimberly McAndrew who was last seen exiting the Canadian Tire store she worked at.

During this episode we will learn about Kim's disappearance, two possibly related crimes against young women, and three equally disturbing suspects."
 

Global News
June 24 2021
Suspect in N.S. 'historic cold case murders' wants to come home | Saltwire
''A former Halifax man considered a suspect in unsolved Nova Scotia killings told the parole board he wants to come home when he's released from a British Columbia prison.

The Parole Board of Canada denied Andrew Paul Johnson's request for both day parole and full parole in a decision released Thursday. But it promised to revisit the 62-year-old dangerous offender's case for day parole in 10 months.

“You have committed violent and sexual offences, involving inappropriately touching young girls, masturbating in your vehicle while watching female children play, engaging in sexual acts with a 12-year-old girl, and physically and sexually assaulting an intimate partner on multiple occasions,” says the written decision dated June 10.

“File information indicates that you are also considered a suspect in a number of murders in Nova Scotia that involve missing/murdered women.”

"Johnson, a former chef and coast guard employee, was jailed in October 1997 after he tried unsuccessfully to abduct three different 12-year-old girls in B.C. by presenting a fake police badge, says the decision.''

''Police sources told The Chronicle Herald in 1998 that Johnson was a suspect in the 1989 disappearance of Kimberly McAndrew, the 1992 murder of Andrea King and the killing of Stephen Michael Hall, whose body was found in the woods near Chester in 1996. King’s remains were found in a wooded area in Lower Sackville on Dec. 22, 1992 -- almost a year after she disappeared. McAndrew was 19 when she disappeared from Quinpool Road in August 1989. Her remains have not been found. ''
 

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