CANADA CANADA - Shawn Cameron Lamb, Suspected SK Caught in Winnipeg MB

Serial Killer(s) - plural. These serial killers have not been caught. Could the murdrers the province of Alberta have links to the serial killer in Saskatchewan? Quite possible if not probable in my opinion.

EDMONTON - Police are investigating more than one serial killer in the deaths and disappearances of Edmonton-area prostitutes, a veteran RCMP officer and lead Project Kare investigator testified

http://www.canada.com/edmontonjourn....html?id=fffdc998-9279-4819-912e-b6972e51b5fa

*snip

However, police said at the time they had not eliminated two local men who were spotted together with Quinney in the weeks before her death.
Both failed lie-detector tests, and "the polygraphist asserted that they had involvement and or knowledge of the crime," according to the affidavit
 
http://www.homelessnation.org/node/15947

Fifteen of the missing are adolescents and teens, aged 13 to 18, like 14-year-old Myrna Montgrand who never made it home from a party in La Loche in 1979, or 15-year-old Norman Louison who vanished walking to a house on the Cowessess First Nation in 1977, and 13-year-old Courtney Struble, last seen walking towards her residence in Estevan on July 9, 2004. That was only four days after Regina was grappling with the puzzling disappearance of Keepness. She is among the four children under aged 12 on the list of long-term missing, with the youngest three-year-old Jonathan Uriah Molina. He was last seen travelling with his mother Maria and two-year-old brother Benjamin, all of Winnipeg. Their burned-out Thunderbird was found Oct. 29, 1985, in a slough on the White Bear First Nation near Carlyle. Police believed the car had become stuck, overheated and caught fire. Personal belongings, including bags of clothing, a suitcase, and the car keys were found in the bush, about 100 yards from the vehicle nearly six months later. Then on Oct. 1, 1986, the skeletal remains of his mother and sibling were discovered nearby, but not Molina. It remains a mystery why the family was in the Carlyle area or ended up on a remote road, two kilometres off the highway.
 
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/br...joins-probe-into-death-of-woman-54102132.html

RCMP won't know until an autopsy is completed today whether the body of an aboriginal female found in a field in East St. Paul on Thursday is a homicide victim.
And both RCMP and Winnipeg police have confirmed the missing persons unit -- the same unit that is part of a new initiative monitoring several dozen high-risk teens to find them before they turn up dead -- is part of the investigation.
 
R.I.P. 18-year-old Hillary Angel Wilson of Winnipeg. I pray to God that the person(s) responsible for this horrible crime of murder is caught. I do believe there are serial killer(s) that need to be brought to Justice before they kill again and again and again and again.


Police have identified a young woman whose body was recently found on the outskirts of Winnipeg, and say she was murdered.

http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Crime/2009/08/23/10571641-sun.html

Anyone with information regarding Wilson's death is asked to call Manitoba Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS) or the RCMP tip line at 1-204-984-6447
 
WINNIPEG — Six weeks before her body was found Thursday just outside Winnipeg, 18-year-old Hillary Angel Wilson wrote a tribute on a Facebook memorial to her friend Cherisse Houle, found dead in a creek outside the city last month.

Police aren't saying whether the deaths of the two young aboriginal women are connected. In fact, they're not saying much at all about the death of Wilson, though RCMP are calling it a homicide.

http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/Slain+Manitoba+women+linked+through+Facebook/1925017/story.html
 
Winnipeg Free PressJuly 3, 2009

The body of a girl found in a stream in the R.M. of Rosser has been identified as Cherisse Houle, 17, of Winnipeg.

*snip

Anyone with information regarding Houle's whereabouts on or after June 26 is asked to contact the Headingley RCMP Detachment at 888-0358 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/year+found+dead/1757915/story.html
 
By Chinta Puxley (CP) –

WINNIPEG — A growing chorus of voices is calling for a provincial task force into missing aboriginal women in Manitoba after another young woman's body was discovered on the outskirts of Winnipeg.
Police are treating 18-year-old Hillary Angel Wilson's death as a homicide but have said little else since her body was found last Thursday. Her death comes one month after her 17-year-old friend, Cherisse Houle, was found dead in a creek near Winnipeg.
The deaths have left friends uneasy and have many calling for a task force to examine why so many young aboriginal women are going missing or are being found murdered.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5ifLajC0LS0C3V4jPb8yZKZfS3t0w
 
Both Wilson and Houle were aboriginal, a fact that has Raven Thundersky shaking her head. She is the chair of Sisters in Spirit, a campaign launched five years ago by the Native Women's Association of Canada to raise awareness about violence against aboriginal women.
"I can't remember the last time – and I mean for aboriginal women – when the last time was that we actually were able to see the face and have the name of one of the murderers responsible for taking one of our women," she said.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2009/08/24/mb-wilson-houle-friends.html
 
The recent deaths of two young aboriginal women near Winnipeg may be connected, according to a close friend who is now scared for her own life.
The woman, who CBC News is not identifying because of her concerns, said she was best friends with Cherisse Houle, 17, and Hillary Angel Wilson, 18, when they got involved a few years ago with a group of men who used them for sex in exchange for food, clothes and crack cocaine.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2009/08/26/mb-deaths-women-connected-manitoba.html

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Unsolved murders of women under review by Winnipeg police2 Winnipeg friends found dead weeks apartRCMP reviewing cold-case homicides for signs of serial killerBody found in stream identified as missing Winnipeg girl, 17Police seek help locating missing Winnipeg girlsWinnipeg's murdered women deserve task force, say aboriginal groups
 
Very chilling indeed to think that there may be an organized group preying on these young woman. Let us hope that this is cracked wide open soon and that the women from the communities receive the support they need. Safehouses, community programs, etc etc.
It is heartening to see that this situation is finally receiving national attentionas well. Hopefully the integrated task force from Winnipeg, RCMP and the First Nations will be successful in solving these horrible crimes, bring the perpetrators to justice create measures to protect the vunerable women from further predation.
 
The Manitoba government, RCMP and Winnipeg Police Service formally established a task force Wednesday to review cases involving missing and murdered women in the province.
"The province is supporting police in this vital task," Attorney General Dave Chomiak said.
"These women were mothers, daughters, sisters and friends. Many are aboriginal. We share a common goal with the police, helping as they seek answers in these cases. The unit will help move these investigations to the next level."
Members of the Manitoba Integrated Task Force for Missing and Murdered Women are experienced investigators, Chomiak said, noting the unit includes three RCMP officers, two RCMP analysts and four officers from the Winnipeg Police Service.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2009/08/26/mb-task-force-murdered-manitoba.html
 
I am so glad to see this finally getting some attention.I think the police should also look into the cases in Manitoba & Saskatchewan being related.Tamra Keepness's case has always sat wrong with me,I have always thought someone in her immediate family isn't telling everything they know about the night she disappeared.
 
Friday, August 28, 2009 12:24 PM


17413_Nicole_HOAR_-with_backpack.jpg
Prince George, B.C.- Investigators from the "E" Division Provincial Unsolved Homicide Unit are continuing their search of a property located at 31645 Pinewood Road in the District of Isle Pierre, west of Prince George.
Investigators have now confirmedwhat opinion 250 reported last night, namely that they are searching for evidence on the property that will help further their investigation into the 2002 disappearance of Nicole Hoar.

http://www.opinion250.com/blog/view...irm+search++is++for+remains++of++nicole++hoar
 
I live in rural Manitoba and a friend of mine is very connected to the Winnipeg Police Force. He once told me that law enforcement does believe there is a serial killer in Winnipeg as well as one operating in Edmonton. He also told me that he two girls (Houle and Wilson) were part of a sex trade ring and were killed because they talked to the police and not by a serial killer. Aboriginal leaders have been demanding for years that the RCMP take the situation of missing aboriginal women in Canada seriously.
 
Missing-women task force sees links in Manitoba deaths

snip*

The task force was announced last August after the deaths of Hillary Angel Wilson, 18, and Cherisse Houle, 17.
Wilson’s body was found in the Rural Municipality of East St. Paul, and classified as a homicide.
In July, Houle’s body was found dumped in a field. Police said it was a suspicious death.
The possibility of a serial killer had been raised at meetings between the RCMP, residents and the province’s justice minister.
Under pressure to deal with the killings and disappearance of women in Manitoba — the same kind of incidents that have happened across Western Canada — police agreed to form the task force.
Speaking this week, RCMP spokeswoman Sgt. Line Karpish and Winnipeg Police Service spokeswoman Const. Jackie Chaput did not identify the number of homicides among the 84 Manitoba cases, or say how many involve missing women where foul play is suspected.
"We’re going to be pursuing certain investigations more aggressively and in a more in-depth fashion," said Chaput.
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Mi...sees+links+Manitoba+deaths/2532331/story.html
 
Where is Claudette Osborne? This beautiful young woman has been missing since July 24, 2008.

http://winnipeg.ctv.ca/servlet/an/l...wpg_osborne_080806/20080806/?hub=WinnipegHome

If you can help find Claudette Osborne, you're asked to call the Winnipeg Police Service Missing Persons Unit at (204) 986-6050 or the Police Non-Emergency line at (204) 986-6222.
New break in case of missing Winnipeg woman
Global News: Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Up until now, it was believed she was last seen at the Lincoln Hotel on McPhillips Street. But now, investigators confirm that she left the hotel and was seen at the corner of Selkirk Avenue and King Street around 6:30 a.m.

"Now we need people to think, King and Selkirk at that time and that place," said Winnipeg Police Service Det. Clyde Raven. "Did they see her? Did they see where she went? Did they see who she could have been with at that time?"
http://www.globalwinnipeg.com/break+case+missing+Winnipeg+woman/3942292/story.html
 

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