Just found this:
http://www.thespec.com/news/crime/article/484564--we-still-have-work-to-do
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We still have work to do'
Residents relieved but also upset with lack of police communication
ARREST: Hamilton police have made an arrest in the six-week-old slaying of 73-year-old Audrey Gleave, whose death homicide detectives described as the most vicious in a decade. David Laurie Scott, 50, is facing a charge of first-degree murder Staff Sgt. Steve Hrab holds a press conference on the arrest.
Kaz Novak/The Hamilton Spectator
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Hamilton police have made an arrest in the six-week-old slaying of 73-year-old Audrey Gleave, whose death...
Gleave killing not connected to any other murders
Its been six weeks Audrey Gleaves murder and neighbours are anxious
Police buttoned-up on Gleave killing
.THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR
Relief. And then more questions.
That's how neighbours of murdered Audrey Gleave, 73, are reacting to news of an arrest and first-degree murder charge in her death.
Hamilton police charged David Laurie Scott, 50, with first-degree murder Thursday around 4 p.m. at a Brantford laundromat. The homeless man had just been released from a Brantford jail the day prior after serving a short sentence on a charge of carrying a concealed knife.
Scott had been arrested by Brantford OPP on the weapon charge Dec. 29, a day before Gleave's viciously attacked and stabbed body was discovered in the garage of her Indian Trail home. He had been squatting in a barn several kilometres down the road that barn was searched by Hamilton homicide detectives.
"There is relief, I'm sure, in the neighbourhood, " said Daryl Ferguson, adding he hopes the news in particular brings relief to his wife, Linda, who would trade e-mails with Gleave.
But it has been six weeks since Gleave's body was discovered. For much of that time police have shared few details of their investigation.
Her random murder has shaken the quiet, semirural neighbourhood just outside Lynden.
Ferguson said he would really like to know a more specific time of death, so that neighbours can refocus on remembering what they were doing at that time.
The retired schoolteacher was last known to be alive the evening of Dec. 27, and police say they are keeping an open mind to the time of her death from that point on.
Neighbour Tony Ascroft also said he was glad to see an arrest made, but added that he is interested in seeing what evidence police have.
"It's good to hear something, " he said. "We'll be watching the trial."
Ascroft said he wished police had communicated more with neighbours through the process.
At a news conference regarding the arrest Friday morning, Staff Sergeant Steve Hrab said that just because an arrest has been made doesn't mean his and his detectives' work is over.