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MURDERED

Helen Betty Osborne
Helen Betty Osborne was abducted and brutally murdered near The Pas, Manitoba,
early in the morning of November 13, 1971. The high school student,with dreams
of becoming a teacher, originally from the Norway House Indian Reserve, was 19
years old when she was killed.
Several months later Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers concluded
that four
young men, Dwayne Archie Johnston, James Robert Paul Houghton, Lee Scott Colgan
and Norman Bernard Manger, were involved in the death. Yet it was not until
December 1987, more than 16 years later, that one of them, Dwayne Johnston, was
convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Betty Osborne.
James Houghton was acquitted. Lee Colgan, having received immunity from
prosecution in return for testifying against Houghton and Johnston, went free.
Norman Manger was never charged.
While walking along Third Street in The Pas on that cold Saturday morning,
Betty Osborne was accosted by four men in a car. Houghton, who was driving,
stopped the car and Johnston got out, attempting to convince Osborne to go with
them to "party." She told them that she did not wish to accompany them. She
then was forced into their car and driven away. In the car Osborne was
assaulted by Colgan and Johnston as Houghton drove. Johnston ripped at her
blouse and Colgan grabbed at her breasts. In spite of her screams and attempts
to escape, Osborne was taken to a cabin belonging to Houghton’s parents at
Clearwater Lake.
At the cabin she was pulled from the car and beaten by Johnston while the
others stood watching and drinking wine they had stolen earlier. Osborne
continued to struggle and scream and, because her assailants were afraid they
might be heard, she was forced back into the car and driven further from town
to a pump house next to the lake. At least some of her clothing was removed by
her assailants in the car. At the pump house she was once more taken from the
car by one or more of her assailants and the beating continued. Her clothes,
those which had not been removed earlier, were taken from her. Wearing only her
winter boots, she was viciously beaten, and stabbed, apparently with a
screwdriver, more than 50 times. Her face was smashed beyond recognition. The
evidence suggests that two people then dragged her body into the bush. Her
clothes were hidden. The four men then left, returned to The Pas and went their
separate ways.
By the end of 1972, although rumours were circulating in The Pas as to the
identity of those involved in the killing, the investigation had stalled.
Between 1973 and 1983 only intermittent checks were made on the case. In July
1983 an extensive review of the file was begun by Const. Robert Urbanoski, of
the Thompson RCMP detachment. Many of the original informants were
reinterviewed. The suspects were contacted again. In June 1985 the RCMP placed
an article in the local newspaper, requesting the assistance of the public in
solving the murder. The result was that several people came forward to recount
comments about the murder made over the years by Colgan and Johnston. It was
the disclosure of those remarks that finally led to charges of murder being
laid against the two in October 1986.
Before the beginning of their preliminary hearing in March 1987, Lee Colgan was
granted immunity from prosecution in return for his testimony. On the strength
of Colgan’s evidence, Houghton was arrested and charged on July 5, 1987. At the
preliminary hearing later that month, both Houghton and Johnston were committed
to stand trial. The Attorney General’s department brought the case to trial in
December 1987. Sixteen years after the murder, a jury found Johnston guilty of
the murder of Betty Osborne. He was sentenced to life imprisonment without
eligibility for parole in 10 years. He was, in fact, released on full parole on October 10, 1997.
Houghton was acquitted.
Johnston’s appeal of his conviction was dismissed by the Manitoba Court of
Appeal on September 14, 1988 and his application for leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Canada was denied on March 13, 1989.
Many Manitobans asked why it took 16 years to bring people to trial for this
brutal murder. It was suggested that many people in the town of The Pas learned
the identity of those responsible, some within a very short time after the
murder, but chose to do nothing about it. It was suggested that because Osborne
was an Aboriginal person, the townspeople considered the murder unimportant.
Allegations of racism, neglect and indifference, on the part of the citizens of
the town, the police and of the Attorney General’s department, were made. (1)
THE INQUIRY
We realize, of course, that much has changed in the years since Betty Osborne’s
life was taken in 1971. The segregation in the school lunch-room, the bars and
the movie theatre has, we understand, ended. Still, much more must be done.
If the two communities make a real and concerted effort to eradicate the
separation, things will inevitably improve. The non-Aboriginal community must
learn to respect Aboriginal people and their culture. Instead of looking at the
Aboriginal people only as consumers, the business community should be offering
them employment in stores and businesses. It is surprising even to see how few
Aboriginal people are employed in the shopping mall located on the reserve. If
Aboriginal people are to become self-sufficient, those in control of business
have to make a greater effort to provide them with an opportunity to work.
Government may have to take the lead by employing greater numbers of
Aboriginal people in all government offices. We believe that quotas should be
used so that Aboriginal people receive preference in employment until the
numbers employed are representative of the numbers living in a community. Not
only could the provincial government do this in its own offices, but it could
require the same policy be followed by all Crown agencies and by all companies
with which it does business.
The pervasive separation and discrimination that existed in The Pas in 1971
shows the need for increasing the involvement of the Aboriginal peoples in the
institutions of mainstream Canada. Would the case have come more quickly to a
conclusion if more Aboriginal persons were in the police? Or in the Crown
Prosecutor’s office? Of course, we have no way of knowing and it is pointless
to speculate. But it is a fact that it was the special effort made by Constable
Urbanoski which brought those involved to court. This may be due in part to
changes in police practice. It is only recently that the police have resorted
to the use of newspaper advertisements and television shows such as "Crime
Stoppers." But it is also possible that, had there been Aboriginal persons
involved in the investigation and prosecution, the necessary extra effort might
have been forthcoming earlier. We do not know if that is so. We cannot know. We
believe that only if the justice system employs more Aboriginal persons will
such questions be avoided in the future. Until it does, such doubts and
suspicions will continue to arise. It is an inescapable fact that the Osborne
case demonstrates that the justice system must employ many more Aboriginal
persons. And it must do so immediately. In the other volume of our report we
discuss more specifically how this process might begin.
It is clear that Betty Osborne would not have been killed if she had not been
Aboriginal. The four men who took her to her death from the streets of The Pas
that night had gone looking for an Aboriginal girl with whom to "party." They
found Betty Osborne. When she refused to party she was driven out of town and
murdered. Those who abducted her showed a total lack of regard for her person
or her rights as an individual. Those who stood by while the physical assault
took place, while sexual advances were made and while she was being beaten to
death showed their own racism, sexism and indifference. Those who knew the
story and remained silent must share their guilt.(2)
(1) (2) The Aboriginal Justice Implementation Commission, November 1999
( full document available online at
www.ajic.mb.ca
)
In December, 1995, the chief of the Norway House First Nation, Ron Evans, Freda
Albert of the Women’s Wellness Circle in Norway House and Eric Robinson
discussed the matter of Dwayne Johnsons day parole with the parole board. As a
result, Johnson's day parole was revoked April 3,1996. He got full parole on
October 10, 1997.
HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF
Despite the inquiry and subsequent media attention in regards to this brutal
murder and the way it was investigated and prosecuted, there is an estimated
500 First Nations women reported missing in Canada, largely from our western
Provinces.
Month after month for the past 15 years or so, flyers showing the faces of our
women are being posted in native organizations. Yet there seems to be no record
of these women vanishing.
There has been little, if any, media attention. When contacted, police
detachments claim they have few if any First nations women reported missing or
unsolved murders of First nations women in their jurisdiction.
Some of these missing women are those who left their communities, hoping to
find work and a better life in larger cities. Others may be runaways. But even
runaways eventually contact someone in their families, or are likely to show up
at pow wows or friendship centres across the country.
SERIAL KILLERS OF FIRST NATIONS WOMEN IN CANADA
JOHN MARTIN CRAWFORD'S VICTIMS
A case study of serial killer John Martin Crawford's attacks on Native women in
Western Canada has been compiled into a book that is ominously reminiscent of
the notorious paperback,
'Conspiracy of Silence'
, published almost three decades ago and subsequently made into a television
movie. In that book, the victim was 19-year-old student Helen Betty Osborne in
The Pas, Man. Because of racism and indifference, it took 16 years to bring her
killers to trial.
Another excellent book, written by Warren Goulding,
'Just Another Indian: A Serial Killer and Canada's Indifference'
, there were many victims, mostly young prostitutes.
Despite those differences, the gruesome themes, regrettably, are nearly
identical. Both books are about white men who hunt down vulnerable Native
women, apprehend and viciously beat or kill them. The subsequent criminal
investigations are either late or flawed; media ignore the slaughter or
under-report it; public reaction is apathetic or non-existent; some crimes are
not punished; accomplices are not prosecuted.
It is estimated that there are approximately 500 First Nations women missing in
Canada, mostly from our Western Provinces, over the past 15 years or so.
It's hard to believe that ALL these women were killed by individuals, in
isolated cases. It is my belief that a number of scenerios are possible,
including a number of serial killers, out to get Native women.
Research on the internet shows just how valued these women are to our police
departments, who are or were, supposed to investigate their deaths, or in some
cases, the fact that they have never been found.
We CANNOT let these women be forgotten!
With this in mind, I have begun this research, and will add to it, as more
information is revealed.
Anyone with information regarding any of these cases or with cases not yet on this website, is invited to contact me at
waabzy1@yahoo.com
Goulding's book reveals that Crawford had already been to prison for
manslaughter for brutally killing 35-year-old Mary Jane Serloin in Lethbridge,
Alta. in 1981 when he was tried for the 1992 murders of Shelley Napope, Eva
Taysup and Calinda Waterhen in Saskatoon.
In the Serloin case, Goulding said the judge found that
"one of the most
troubling aspects of the attack was Crawford's callous disregard"
for his
victim. After killing Mary Jane, Crawford immediately returned to the tavern
for pizza and beer.
In addition,
"the state of the victim's body told the police they were looking
for a special breed of criminal,"
yet Crawford was sentenced to just 10 years
and served five before beginning a string of new assaults and murders.
Crawford may not have been the only one without a heart.
Mary Jane's family in Brocket, Alta. told Goulding they were ignored by
investigating authorities up to and including Crawford's June 16, 1982
sentencing.
Her sister Justine English said,
"They didn't even have the decency
to let me know what was going on. I really would have wanted to see him, to see
what the guy that killed my sister looked like."
Crawford was let out of prison in 1989. His almost nightly habit was to cruise
the dilapidated areas of town in his mother's car looking for prostitutes. He
was frequently in the company of drinking companion and former fellow inmate
Bill Corrigan who witnessed or participated in some of Crawford's crimes.
John Martin Crawford's known victims
MURDERED
MARY JANE SERLOIN
, aged 35
(Missing on December 23, 1981). Her
nude body was found in the alcove of
the old No. 1 firehall in Lethbridge, Alberta on December 25, 1981.
John Martin Crawford was convicted of her murder. He was sentenced to ten years
in prison, and was released in 1989.
"It seems any time a Native is murdered,"
Mary Jane's sister commented,
"it isn’t a major case. It’s just another dead Indian."
In 1990, while living in Saskatoon, he was fined for attempting
to engage the services of a prostitute. Two years later he was
charged with raping Janet Sylvestre, a thirty-six-year-old
aboriginal woman. Before the year was up, he had murdered three more First
Nations women.
NOTE: JANET SYLVESTRE was later found murdered. Although Crawford was considered a suspect he was never charged in her murder. Her case remains unsolved.
MURDERED
Shelley Napope
SHELLEY NAPOPE
, aged 16, from the One Arrow
First Nation.
(Disappeard - summer 1992, found murdered - 1994).
Those were troubled times for the free-spirited Shelley, but her parents
Merle and Hubert Napope have fond recollections of the real Shelley, the one
her grandmother called Owl in honour of her huge, dark eyes.
Shelley was a joy from Day One, recalls Merle. From the day Mom and baby came
home from the hospital in Rosthern, Shelley enchanted everyone she came in
contact with. She was quick to make friends.
"She wasn't ever shy,"
says Merle.
"She would come up to you and ask, 'Who are
you?' People used to love her because she wasn't shy."
Summer was special to Shelley. With her brother Hubert, whom she usually called
Huey, the youngster would go to Bible camp or spend entire days at the swimming
pool. She loved to pick berries in the countryside around Duck Lake.
Although she performed reasonably well in school—particularly in music, art and
phys Ed—the restrictions and discipline of the stuffy classrooms weren't to
Shelley's liking. In early teens she began to skip classes and frequently ran
from the school in Duck Lake, only to be found a few days later in Saskatoon.
Letters written from jail reveal a side of Shelley that was occasionally more
mature and pragmatic than her behaviour on the outside would suggest.
One such
letter, penned inside Kilburn Hall and sent to Merle, had this to say:
"I hope I can come home soon because I miss Huey and Dad because you are my
only true family that care about me. I am going to go straight and make my life
much better. I am going off the street life and go back to school and get good
grades and do better. I know I can too, but I never tried to do it. I love you
always."
Shelley met John Crawford in early 1992. She met up with him and his ex jail
mate, Bill Corrigan, one night, and asked them for a ride to Confederation
Park, a west-side neighbourhood of
modest ’70s-style family homes and duplexes.
“I’ve got to see
some people out there,"
she said.
“No problem,"
Crawford responded.
“Jump in."
John and Bill waited for Shelley then drove her to an abandoned area, often
used for Sweat Lodge Ceremonies, where John Crawford raped and beat her. When
she begged to be brought back home, promising not to go to police, John dragged
her into the bush and stabbed her repeatedly in her stomach, chest and side.
John Crawford then yanked the knife out of Shelley's stomach, and ordered Bill
Corrigan to cover her with branches and leaves.
Back in Saskatoon, John Crawford rolled Shelley's clothes into a ball and
disposed of them in a dumpster.
He then went home, and showered before driving his friend Bill Corrigan back
to his home at the Albany Hotel.
By the time the remains of Shelley Napope were found in the fall
of 1994, there was little physical evidence left to aid investigators
in determining what had taken place on the night she was killed.
Given the degree of decomposition of the body, it was impossible
even to establish a probable cause of death.
Both, John Crawford and Bill Corrigan were both arrested.
Corrigan and Crawford both agreed on what led to her being led to the willow
grove near Saskatoon.
On
audio tapes secretly recorded by the RCMP, Crawford—in calm,
clipped tones, as if he were discussing the weather—clearly
confirms many of the specifics of Shelley’s murder. His only
surprise was her name.
“I thought her name was Angie,”
he said.
MURDERED
Eva Taysup
EVA TAYSUP
(Disappeared - Summer 1992, found strangled - 1994)
John Crawford convicted.
There is no doubt that Eva Taysup's parents, Mary Taysup and Oliver
Okemahwasin, wanted the best for Eva and her ten siblings. When conditions on
their home reserve of Yellow Quill deteriorated to the point where Mary and
Oliver determined that a move to a healthier environment was required, off they
went. There were frequent moves; to Kelvington, to Nut Mountain and then
further afield.
Mary and Oliver were strict. Bev Taysup, Eva's younger sister, has praise for
her parents' efforts to provide a safe and nurturing home for the youngsters.
As she grew into her teens, Eva was a robust, popular girl.
Among the happiest times were the warm Saskatchewan summer days when the Taysup
family traveled to powwows. Bev remembers her bigger sister running off to play
with the older girls, her loud laughter carrying throughout the grounds. Eva
was a gregarious girl, always smiling, and usually surrounded by friends.
Eva, not unlike Shelley Napope and Calinda Waterhen, had a restless streak.
While still in her teens, Eva moved to Saskatoon where she met Ian Gardypie, a
young man from the Beardy's and Okemasis First Nation near Duck Lake. Between
1985 and 1989, four children were born to Eva and Ian: Rene in 1985, Sydney in
1986, Rickie in 1988 and Angel Dawn in 1989.
Speaking in Saulteaux, Mary Taysup says Eva
"looked after her kids really well."
Bev Taysup's memories of those years are of her sister raising
"her little
family,"
with a steady stream of friends dropping over for coffee and long
visits. Eva loved to have company, and with four youngsters to care for, she
didn't get out very often.
"Her smile was so big and she had a loud laugh,"
remembers Cheryl Taysup, a first cousin to Eva and Bev.
"She had a real nice personality. When I was there she was taking care of the
kids, and I remember she would include all the kids in everything, and make
sure they shared."
After Ian and Bev separated, Eva fell heavily into the party scene. Her
favourite haunt was the Barry Hotel where there was live music in the evenings
and she could be around her friends. She loved to dance.
"My sister was an outgoing person,"
says Bev.
"She loved to be around people.
She was a trusting person, sometimes too trusting."
MURDERED
Calinda Waterhen
CALINDA WATERHEN
, aged 22.
(Disappeared - Summer 1992, found strangled - 1994)
John Crawford convicted.
Calinda's Cree Name is Nemihkeepakow squewe or Dancing Leaves Woman. It was a
name given to her by the grandfather of Steve Morningchild, Calinda's father.
Steve Morningchild, who lives near Loon Lake and is a member of the Makwa
Sahgaiehean First Nation, acknowledges that Calinda arrived in this world at a
time when he and his wife, the late Margaret Waterhen, were fighting the demons
of alcohol and violence. In 1970, the year Calinda was born, Steve was only 18
and Margaret a year younger. Steve realizes now that he was not ready to be a
father and Margaret was ill prepared for the responsibilities of motherhood.
Before long, Social Services stepped in and removed Calinda and her other
siblings from the home. Calinda lived for some time with the Pete and Bernice
Martel family on the Flying Dust Reserve near Meadow Lake.
Evelyn Martel, daughter of Pete and Bernice, remembers Calinda as a welcome
addition to the household.
"She was quite quiet and liked to sit around and read those true story books
and watch TV,"
remembers Evelyn.
"Her favourite show was Happy Days. Calinda
liked the romantic, mellow music that they played in the eighties."
Calinda dreamed of becoming a teacher and it never occurred to Evelyn to doubt
that the skinny girl with the free spirit and quiet determination would realize
her goals.
"I thought she was going to go somewhere and do something better,"
says Evelyn.
The most important thing to Calinda
"was to be part of a family. That's what
she wanted more than anything."
HIGHWAY OF TEARS SERIAL KILLER(S)

Highway 16 - Highway of Tears
The 720-kilometre stretch of highway between Prince
Rupert and Prince George in the northern interior of British
Columbia has come to be known as the "Highway of Tears"
after a number of Indigenous women and
girls were assaulted,disappeared or were found murdered
in communities on or near the highway in the 1990s.
Calgary Sun, July 14, 2002 reporter, Peter Smith reports
“Vanished: Somewhere Along the
Highway of Tears Nicole Hoar Simply Disappeared
Aboriginal women - thirty-two in all - have gone missing
along Highway 16 between Prince Rupert and Prince George,
now referred to as the Highway of Tears.
Between 1988 and 1995, five young women --
Alberta Williams, Delphine Nikal, Ramona Wilson,
Roxanne Thiara, and Lana Derrick - went missing
along that stretch of highway.
It was not
until the first non native woman disappeared along this
same stretch of highway that the media gave some attention
to these disappearances/killings.
We know that there is at least one serial killer
along ths stretch of highway
These women's stories are found on
the BC Pages of this website

ROBERT (WILLIE)PICKTON'S ALLEGED VICTIMS
To date, Robert (Willie) Pickton has been charged with at least 25 counts of first degree murder involving some of the missing women from Downtown Eastside Vancouver. Many of Pickton's victims were women of native ancestry.
More charges are pending, due to evidence still being gathered against him.
DNA of at other women have been located on the farm he shared with his brother, David. Charges for these women's murders may be added later.
The preliminary hearing just ended in BC, with a media ban of all proceedings until the trial which is expected to begin in early 2004.
Please click on the British Columbia Link to read about the murders of the First Nations women Pickton has been charged with.

EDMONTON SERIAL KILLERS
A number of women ( primarily native, drug addicted prostitues ) have been murdered in/near Edmonton, Alberta, over the past several years.
Edmonton Police working with RCMP have formed "Project Kare", to help solve these cases.
Please visit the Alberta page to read about these women.

GORDON PAUL JORDAN
Gordon Paul Jordan, a barber in Vancouver, picked up at least seven native women, brought them to a cheap hotel room, and fed them alcohol until they died.
Trial testimony was that he would pick out vulnerable native women bring them to his hotel room with offers of free booze and money.
He would then say, "Have a drink, down the hatch baby, 20 bucks if you drink it right down; see if you're a real woman; finish that drink, finish that drink, down the hatch hurry, right down; you need another drink, I'll give you 50 bucks if you can take it;... until they died.
He would then, later, call police to say there was a dead woman in the hotel room.
Even after he was convicted, he continued this behaviour, has been re-arrested a number of times on violation of parole charges (being seen in public drinking places, or in the company of women), and he continues to be released from jail to repeat his behaviour. Today he is out of prison.
Click the following links to view more cases
(Red text indicates the currently viewed page)
Main Missing/Murdered Native Women page
MISSING ALERTS
SASKATCHEWAN
ALBERTA
BC
MANITOBA
ONTARIO
NORTHWEST TERRITORIES
NOVA SCOTIA
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND
NEW BRUNSWICK
SUCCESS STORIES
Other Native Women Killed in Canada
QUEBEC
NEWFOUNDLAND/LABRADOR
AMERICAN CASES
Please sign our Petition to the Canadian Government to investigate why so many of these cases remain unsolved

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