Babcock, Laura

The Murder of Laura Babcock

Laura Babcock was murdered by her ex-boyfriend and occasional lover Dellen Millard on July 4, 2012. His motive was to appease his current girlfriend with whom Babcock had exchanged insulting texts.

The Laura Babcock Case

Map of Laura Babcock Case

Video of Laura Babcock Case

Laura Babcock, a 23-year-old University of Toronto graduate and aspiring actress, was described by friends as bubbly and fun-loving.

Although her body was never found, Dellen Millard, 32, and Mark Smich, 30, were found guilty of her 1st degree murder on December 16, 2017. The two had already been convicted for the murder of Tim Bosma and were sentenced to serve 25 years each before they are eligible for parole. Their sentences for the murder of Laura Babock will run consecutively, meaning they must serve 50 years before they are eligible for parole.

2008-09: Laura Babcock & Dellen Millard

Laura Babcock met Dellen Millard, a young millionaire and heir to Millardair, an aviation company based in Waterloo, at Toronto’s Brunswick House pub in late 2008 – early 2009. They dated for awhile, ultimately becoming friends and occasional lovers.

2010: Laura Babcock & Shawn Lerner

Laura met businessman Shawn Lerner who she dates for about 18 months before breaking up at Christmas in 2011. Laura and Lerner become very close friends and he will later play an integral part at her murder trial.

2011-2012: Laura’s mental health spiral

During a hospital visit in August, 2011, Laura told healthcare workers she cried all the time and suffered from anxiety and depression. She also mentioned having an intense fear of death that could last for months at a time. She admitted to self-harm.

By April, 2012, Laura had been to the hospital over a dozen times with mental health issues.

2012: The love triangle – Dellen Millard, Christina Noudga & Laura Babcock

In the meantime, Dellen Millard developed a relationship with new girlfriend, Christina Noudga, who became jealous of his relationship with Laura.

On February 26, 2012, Noudga texts Laura: Happy birthday. A year ago today was the first time I slept with Dellen.

Laura replies: That’s fine, I slept with him a couple of weeks ago.

After the exchange between his ex-girlfriend and current girlfriend, Millard sends the following text to Laura: You are harmful to me. please don’t try to contact me until you’ve made some huge leaps of self discovery. as i said before, good luck with life.

Millard would later say in court that he and Noudga had an open relationship and that she was aware he slept with other women. However, a text that Laura sent to a mutual friend, Andrew Michalski, tells a different story. She wrote the following: ya dells (Dellen) def not a fan of me. He told me he told xtina (Christina) when he slept with me before. Erg these ppl cause [so] much unwanted drama for me. and bring me into it.

On April 17, 2012, Millard texted Noudga that he was going to take care of Laura Babcock by writing: first im going to hurt her. Then I’ll make her leave. I will remove her from our lives.

June, 2012: Shawn Lerner steps in to help Laura Babcock

By June of 2012, Laura was homeless and working for Last Minute Escorts in downtown Toronto. She and her dog, Lacey, couch surfed as she looked for a permanent place to stay.

Lerner put Laura up in a west end motel for a few nights and gave her an iPad so she can search for apartments. He would later say that Laura had told him about her escort work, but she seemed new to it and told him there was no sex involved.

“The way she explained it to me, it was sort of . . . men looking to have a pretty girl on their arm,” he said at trial, “She may have believed it. I was obviously not convinced that might be all there was to it.”

Friends said that Laura had also developed a cocaine habit at this time.

July, 2012: Dellen Millard murders Laura Babcock, Mark Smich helps to dispose of her body

In the days before Laura’s disappearance, she and Millard’s cell phones made contact over 100 times. Then on evening of July 3, 2012, Laura traveled to the Kipling subway station where Millard picked her up and drove her to his home in Etobicoke. Her phone ceased all activity about an hour later.

Millard’s friend and accomplice, Mark Smich, received a text from Millard around 7:30 p.m. that read: I’m on a mission, back in 1 hr.

The next day, the iPad Shawn Lerner had given Laura is renamed “Mark’s iPad” through a connection to Millard’s computer and Millard takes a cell phone picture of an object wrapped in a blue tarp at his farm in Waterloo. Later that day, he orders a rush delivery order for a new mattress.

Millard had previously instructed his mechanic, Shane Schlatman, to order a commercial farm animal incinerator which arrives at the Waterloo hangar on July 5th, and Schlatman, Millard, and Smich build a trailor to move the it to Millard’s farm in Waterloo.

On July 14, 2012, both Lerner and Laura Babcock’s family file a missing person’s report with police. Lerner would later say the police did not seem concerned about Laura’s disappearance, even less so when they learned about her mental illness and escort work.

On July 23, 2012, Millard texts Smich “Bbq has run its warm up, it’s ready for meat,” and then does a Google search on temperatures for cremation. He takes pictures on his phone that include Smich with the incinerator that evening. Objects seen in the incinerator are described as human bones by a forensic expert later at trial.

July 27, 2012: Dellen Millard tells Shawn Lerner that he should” have no reasonable expectation” of finding Laura Babcock

In late July, Laura’s last phone bill arrived at her parent’s house. Her worried parents contact her friends, one of whom is Lerner, who noticed the last calls made on Laura’s phone before it went dead were to Millard.

Lerner texted Millard: I’m not looking to point a finger at anyone but we’re concerned about Laura and it looks like you were the last person to correspond with her.

Millard ignored the his first few texts, but finally responded that he didn’t know where she was.

Lerner asked Millard to discuss the situation in person, and on July 27th the two met up at Starbucks. Millard told Lerner that Laura was a cocaine addict and was hounding him to get drugs. Millard said he “vehemently” refused the request, adding that Lerner should “have no reasonable expectation of finding her.”

August, 2012: Mark Smich confesses to murder

Smich invited friends Desi Liberatore and David Cronin inside the garage at his mother’s home in Oakville to smoke pot. Smich rapped lyrics for the men that police would find later written on Laura’s old iPad. 

The bitch started off all skin and bone/ Now the bitch lay on some ashy stone
Last time I saw her’s outside the home/ And if you go swimming you can find her phone.

The men would later testify that Smich then confessed that he “killed a girl, burned a body, and disposed of it in a lake.”

May, 2013: Dellen Millard & Mark Smich charged with 1st degree murder of Tim Bosma

It wasn’t until after Millard and Smich were charged with the murder of Tim Bosma that police opened an investigation into the disappearance of Laura Babcock and reopened an investigation into the death of Wayne Millard, Dellen Millard’s father, who’s death had been ruled a suicide.

Dec. 2013: Police find Laura Babcock’s belongings at Mark Smich’s home

On a search of Mark Smich’s home in Oakville, police find Laura’s red duffel bag with an ID tag handwritten by her, and the black iPad that was given to her by Lerner and renamed Mark’s iPad after she was killed.

Adriano, Delia

Unsolved: The Murder of Delia Adriano

Any information, contact Det. Phil Campbell at 905-465-8736 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477)
www.haltoncrimestoppers.ca or by texting “Tip 201” with your message to 274637 (crimes)

Delia Adriano’s fiancée dropped her at her parent’s Oakville home on a Sunday night and drove away. Delia never made it inside. Her body was found Nov. 6, 1982, in the woods near Campbellville.

On Sunday, Sept. 26, 1982, 25-year-old Delia Adriano spent the day with her fiancé Danny Dutra watching a soccer game and hanging out at a barbecue before he dropped at her parents’ home in Oakville around 9:30 p.m. Before she could get into the house, she was abducted.

Six weeks later, on Nov. 6, 1982, Delia was found nude in a wooded lot just south of Milton by Del Parcham, a woodcutter. Her body was too decomposed to determine cause of death or whether she had been sexually assaulted.

Witnesses reported hearing a woman’s screens a few blocks from Delia’s home that night around 10:30 p.m. Others also reported seeing a woman who fit Delia’s description being forced into a car by a man. The man and woman argued inside the car for about five minutes before the man drove the car off with the car’s lights off.

Delia’s purse was found on the sidewalk in the area of the incident the next morning.

The Case: Facts & Speculations

  • Police think Delia knew her assailant. Delia’s family also think it could be someone who knew their family because the family dog did not bark while she interacted with the man on the street. Also, witnesses said it seemed like a couple arguing and not strangers.
  • The fact that she was found nude suggests sexual assault as a motive even though her body was too decomposed to provide definitive answers.
  • A composite sketch was made of the suspect who was described as white, 5’7 to 5’9, medium build, with brown hair feathered back to the neck.
  • The car was descried as a dark blue, 2-door subcompact 1970s Chevrolet Chevette (or something similar) with three stripes on the side. The car had Ontario plates and was seen parked in the driveway of a model home sales office nearby.
  • Adriano was part of a very close-knit Portuguese community, so it is possible the killer was someone in that group. Even the priest made a comment about it at her funeral.
  • Her fiancee is not a suspect in her murder.

Map

Images from the Delia Adriano Case

Possible Suspects

Larry Talbot (pseudonym)

In his book, “A Viable Suspect:The Story of Multiple Murders and How a Police Force’s Reach Proved Too Short for Canada’s Most Notorious Cold Case”, retired OPP officer Barry Ruhl believes a serial killer he calls Larry Talbot could be responsible for the death of Leah Sousa, as well as many other girls and women in southwestern Ontario.

In 1971, Talbot broke into Ruhl’s Sauble Beach cottage and attacked his fiancée. Luckily, Ruhl interrupted the assault and arrested Talbot at the scene.

Later, he attended a community policing meeting about Leah Sousa’s murder where he learned that the intruder gained entrance to the home by smashing out the back door window. This was also how Talbot broke into Ruhl’s cottage 21 years earlier.

A traveling salesman, Talbot frequented the highways of southwestern Ontario and a “rape kit” was found in his car, but he died before he was thoroughly investigated for any unsolved murders, including:

  • Lynne Harper, 12, from Vanastra. Her 1959 murder saw Steven Truscott wrongly convicted.
  • Lynda White, 19, went missing from London in 1968. Her remains were found in Norfolk County in 1973.
  • Jacqueline English, 15, went missing from London in 1969. Her body was found near Tilsonburg.
  • Pauline Ivy Dudley, 17, from Oakville, was killed in 1973. Halton Regional Police informed Ruhl that Talbot was the prime suspect in her case.
  • Christine Prince, from Toronto, was killed in 1982. Her body was found floating in Toronto’s Rouge River.
  • Leah Sousa, 13, from Cumberland Beach, was killed in 1992. Her body was found in her back yard.
  • Valerie Stevens, 19, from Toronto, murdered in 1992. Her body was found in Burford.
  • Cindy Hallaway, 17, last seen in Midland, was murdered in 1992. Her body was found near Phelpston.

Dudley, Pauline Ivy

Unsolved: The Murder of Pauline Ivy Dudley

Any information, call Halton police at 905-465-8768 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477)

Pauline Dudley left her parents home on Lakeshore Dr. in Oakville around 10 p.m. to hitchhike her way back to the apartment she shared with her boyfriend in Milton. Her decomposed body was found by a farmer in his Oakville field August 28, 1973.

Here’s are facts and speculations about the case:

  • Her killer was probably a stranger that picked her up while she was hitchhiking
  • Robbery was not a motive as her wallet was found at the scene
  • Her boyfriend has been totally cleared as a suspect in the case
  • DNA evidence was recovered from the scene although it is not known if it is too degraded to test

Seventeen-year-old Pauline Dudley had settled down in a Milton apartment with her boyfriend after they had spent some time travelling. She was looking forward to finding a job and had recently filled out applications for secretarial work in the area.

She spent some time with friends on Monday, August 10, 1973, before she was dropped off at her parents home on Lakeshore Drive, in the Bronte area of Oakville. Her mother saw her off around 10 p.m. that evening as Pauline planned to hitchhike home to Milton, but her boyfriend said she never arrived. He reported her missing the next day.

A farmer found her fully-clothed body in his Oakville wheat field at Lower Base Line and hwy #25 on August 28, 1983. Her killer had partially concealed her body under hay and her wallet was found lying close by. 

Her body was too decomposed to established cause of death or whether she had been sexually assaulted, although it was reported that she suffered a hairline fracture to her jaw. Police collected DNA evidence from the scene.

Map

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Images

Possible Suspects

Larry Talbot (pseudonym)

In his book, “A Viable Suspect:The Story of Multiple Murders and How a Police Force’s Reach Proved Too Short for Canada’s Most Notorious Cold Case”, retired OPP officer Barry Ruhl believes a serial killer he calls Larry Talbot could be responsible for the death of Pauline Ivy Dudely, as well as many other girls and women in southwestern Ontario.

At the time of Pauline’s murder, Ruhl was the prime suspect in the case.

In 1971, Talbot broke into Ruhl’s Sauble Beach cottage and attacked his fiancée. Luckily, Ruhl interrupted the assault and arrested Talbot at the scene.

A traveling salesman, Talbot frequented the highways of southwestern Ontario and a “rape kit” was found in his car, but he died before he was thoroughly investigated for any unsolved murders, including:

  • Lynne Harper, 12, from Vanastra. Her 1959 murder saw Steven Truscott wrongly convicted.
  • Lynda White, 19, went missing from London in 1968. Her remains were found in Norfolk County in 1973.
  • Jacqueline English, 15, went missing from London in 1969. Her body was found near Tilsonburg.
  • Christine Prince, from Toronto, was killed in 1982. Her body was found floating in Toronto’s Rouge River.
  • Delia Adriano, 25, from Oakville, was killed in 1982. Her body was found in rural Oakville west of  Campbellville.
  • Leah Sousa, 13, from Cumberland Beach, was killed in 1992. Her body was found in her back yard.
  • Valerie Stevens, 19, from Toronto, murdered in 1992. Her body was found in Burford.
  • Cindy Hallaway, 17, last seen in Midland, was murdered in 1992. Her body was found near Phelpston.

Sources

https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2018/05/06/police-still-looking-for-oakville-womans-killer-45-years-later.html

https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2018/05/06/police-still-looking-for-oakville-womans-killer-45-years-later.html

https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2018/05/06/police-still-looking-for-oakville-womans-killer-45-years-later.html

Prince, Christine

Unsolved: The Murder of Christine Price

Any information, call Toronto Homicide at 416-808-7400 or homicide@torontopolice.on.ca, Case File #24/1982
Call anonymously to Crime Stoppers 416-222-TIPS (8477)

In the early hours of Monday, June 21, 1982, 25-year-old Christine Prince was abducted from downtown Toronto, taken to a hidden lane along the Rouge River in Scarborough, where she was sexually assaulted and murdered.

Here is what police think:

  • Christine was cautious and would never had accepted a ride from a stranger.
  • Christine was abducted from the east sidewalk outside of 18 Pinewood Ave. where her umbrella was found.
  • It is likely there was more than one assailant because the abduction was so quick and noiseless, and to subdue Christine for the 30 km drive to Rouge River.
  • The assailants were very familiar with the back roads along the Rouge River
  • Christine’s missing jewelery could have been given as a gift to wife, mother or girlfriend of the assailant.
  • Tire tracks belonging to a four-wheel drive Toyota were found near the crime scene that may or may not be connected to Christine’s murder.
  • Police do have DNA evidence collected from the scene.

Help bring Christine’s killer to justice!!

On Sunday, June 20, 1982, Christine Prince met up with her friend, Gloria Betts, to watch a movie at the Yonge- Bloor cinema. Both women had traveled from their homeland of Wales to work as live-in nannies for families in Toronto.

After the movie, they walked to the Four Seasons Hotel to meet up with Christine’s boyfriend, David Curtis-Smith, who was finishing work as a chef at the hotel. The three then went to a cafe nearby for donuts before heading home.

Between 1-1:30 a.m., Monday, June 21, 1982, Christine and Gloria got on the Bloor St. subway heading north to St. Clair St., while David traveled east. Exiting the subway at the St. Clair station, the women caught the westbound St. Clair streetcar. Gloria got off at Bathurst St. leaving Christine to travel two stops to Wychwood Ave., where she got off the streetcar, walked a very short distance to Pinewood Ave. and headed north towards the Kruzick residence.

Her distinctive umbrella was found at 6 a.m. by a woman walking south on Pinewood past Humewood park. Noticing the umbrella was in good condition, she picked it up and hung it on the doorknob of a shop located at St. Clair Ave. W. and Christie St.

The Kruzicks became worried when Christine had not returned by 7:30 a.m. and contacted the police.

Around 9 a.m., Dominic Dodds, a city worker cutting the grass beside HWY 401 near Meadowvale Rd., found Christine’s wallet.

On the morning of Tuesday, June 22, 1982, people walking to work along Sewell’s Rd. spotted Christine’s nude body floating face down in the Rouge River. She had been sexually assaulted and murdered.

Investigators identified the crime scene along a hidden lane that runs beside the Rouge River, about 200 metres upstream from where Christine’s body came to rest. There, they found her clothing and purse, which was missing her wallet and an instant camera, and rope believed to tie her wrists. Two pieces of jewelery that Christine always wore – a gold ring with two joined hearts and a gold watch – were missing and have never been found.

Although she had been badly beaten, Christine’s cause of death was drowning, either by the assailant holding her under water or she was unable to save herself due to her injuries.

Places & Routes in Christine Prince Case

The Christine Prince Case

Possible Suspects

FBI Profile of Christine’s Killers

The FBI profilers were contacted by Toronto police in 1985. The following is their thoughts on Christine’s assailants.

  • She was kidnapped by two men, and her wrists were immediately bound
  • Her assailants were familiar with the back road near the Rouge River where she was taken
  • One assailant (the leader) raped and murdered Christine while the other (the follower) stood by

The Slim Black Man

On May 30, 1982, a woman was attacked in an attempted rape as she walked south on Humewood Ave. at 7:30 a.m. She bit her attacker’s hand and ran into the street waving down a passing vehicle. She described the assailant as a slim, 6′ black man. Investigators made a tentative link to Christine’s case.

William Brett Henson

Through DNA, Henson was convicted of the murder of 19-year-old Jenny Isford 15 years after her death in 1982. Jenny was attacked walking home after exited a public bus in North York.

Danny Wood

Danny Wood was a drifter who had already murdered a woman in Calgary, Alberta, before he located to the Timmons/North Bay area of Ontario in the early 1980s. There he raped and murdered women along the Highway 11 corridor. Police think he may be responsible for up to 15 murders in Canada.

Paul Bernardo

Although Bernardo is not known to have committed any murders before the 1990s, he was active as the Scarborough Rapist in the late 80s. He would have been 18-years-old at the time Christine was murdered.

Larry Talbot (pseudonym)

In his book, “A Viable Suspect:The Story of Multiple Murders and How a Police Force’s Reach Proved Too Short for Canada’s Most Notorious Cold Case”, retired OPP officer Barry Ruhl believes a serial killer he calls Larry Talbot could be responsible for the death of Christine Prince, as well as many other girls and women in southwestern Ontario.

In 1971, Talbot broke into Ruhl’s Sauble Beach cottage and attacked his fiancée. Luckily, Ruhl interrupted the assault and arrested Talbot at the scene.

A traveling salesman, Talbot frequented the highways of southwestern Ontario and a “rape kit” was found in his car, but he died before he was thoroughly investigated for any unsolved murders, including:

  • Lynne Harper, 12, from Vanastra. Her 1959 murder saw Steven Truscott wrongly convicted.
  • Lynda White, 19, went missing from London in 1968. Her remains were found in Norfolk County in 1973.
  • Jacqueline English, 15, went missing from London in 1969. Her body was found near Tilsonburg.
  • Pauline Ivy Dudley, 17, from Oakville, was killed in 1973. Halton Regional Police informed Ruhl that Talbot was the prime suspect in her case.
  • Delia Adriano, 25, from Oakville, was killed in 1982. Her body was found in rural Oakville west of  Campbellville.
  • Leah Sousa, 13, from Cumberland Beach, was killed in 1982. Her body was found in her backyard.
  • Valerie Stevens, 19, from Toronto, murdered in 1992. Her body was found in Burford.
  • Cindy Hallaway, 17, last seen in Midland, was murdered in 1992. Her body was found near Phelpston.

Sources

Mellor, Lee. Cold North Killers: Canadian Serial Murder, 1982

Survivors of Heinous Crimes Blog

Rudavsky, Elizabeth

Murderer: Elizabeth Rudavsky

About

About

  • Birth name: 
  • Alias/nickname: 
  • Sex: Female
  • Date of birth:  N/A N/A,
  • Location of birth: 

Physical Description

  • Ethnicity: Caucasian
  • Hair: 
  • Eyes: 
  • Height: 
  • Weight: 
  • Build: 
  • Other descriptors: 

Early Life

  • Birth order: 
  • Number of siblings: 
  • Parent’s marital status: 
  • Father’s occupation: 
  • Abuse by father?:
  • Mother’s occupation: 
  • Abuse by mother?: 
  • Parental substance abuse issues: N/A
  • Traumatic family event: 
  • Age at traumatic family event: 

McDonald Triad

  • History of starting fires:
  • History of animal abuse:
  • History of bed wetting:

Relationships

  • Sexual preference: Heterosexual
  • Marital status: Married
  • Number of children:

Living arrangements during series:

Lived with spouse: Lived with children: Lived with parents: Lived with room-mate(s):  Lived alone:  Traveled for a living:  Transient: 

Psychological History

  • History of substance abuse: N/A
  • Had received psychological therapy?:
  • Institutionalized for mental illness?:
  • Psychological diagnosis:

Potential Contributors

  • XYY: N/A
  • Physically attractive: N/A
  • Physical defect: N/A
  • Speech defect: N/A
  • Head injury: N/A
  • Physical abuse: N/A
  • Psychological abuse: N/A
  • Sexual abuse: N/A

Education

  • Highest grade completed:
  • Highest degree achieved:
  • Grades at school:
  • IQ:

Employment History

  • Military service: N/A
  • Attempted career in law enforcement: N/A
  • Worked in law enforcement: N/A
  • Types of jobs worked:
  • Fired from jobs?: N/A

The Murders

The Series

  • Time span of series: September, 2002 to September, 2002
  • Number of victims: 1
  • Location of murders: Chatham, Ontario
  • Victim profile: Husband
  • Accomplice?: N/A
  • Name of accomplice:
  • Relationship to accomplice:

Profile

  • Murderer category: Domestic killer
  • Serial killer sub-type: N/A
  • Serial killer characteristics:
  • Domestic killer sub-type: N/A

Criminal History

  • Committed crimes previous to series?:
  • Description of previous crimes:
  • Previously convicted of a crime: N/A

Murder Method

  • Murder method: Stabbing
  • Characteristics of crime: N/A
  • Types of sexual assault: N/A

After Death Behaviour

  • Disposal of bodies: N/A

Arrest

  • Date of arrest: 
  • Did killer confess?: Yes
  • What did murderer confess to?: Killed husband in self-defence
  • Date convicted: 
  • Sentence: The second-degree murder charge against Ms. Rudavsky was dismissed courtroom after the judge, Crown prosecutors and police investigators all agreed she had acted in self-defence.
  • Status: 

Timeline

February, 2002: Elizabeth Rudavsky meets Angelo Heddington after visiting the farm where he worked while she was selling dog tags

May, 2002: Elizabeth and Angelo get married. The two were together for seven months during which Elizabeth never saw her husband in the light after he told her his genitals had been burned and deformed by a previous girlfriend.

Angelo becomes increasingly controlling and violent. He threatens to kill her family, pulls guns on her and violates her body with a metal pipe.

September 21, 2002:  Elizabeth stabbed Angelo with a 12-inch butcher knife. When police found her trying to stop the bleeding, she blamed her husband’s injury on a burglar.

But he was still conscious and yelled: “She stabbed me! My wife!”

Elizabeth was arrested and charged with murder after Angelo died on the operating table.

Psychologist and domestic abuse expert Dr. Paul G Jaffe was brought in by police and had sessions over seven months, coming to the conclusion she had “prisoner of war” syndrome – withdrawal and utter hopelessness as a reaction to imprisonment.

During these sessions she revealed the pair had never married – and she was never pregnant. She explained: “It was all a hoax. Angelo wanted me to wear a ring so he could say I was all his.”

Over the course of the investigation, police learned Angelo had a history of abuse and stalking in at least three past relationships.

The Victim

Angelo Heddington (Maureen)

Date of birth: 1973

Date of murder: Sept. 21, 2002

Age at death: 30

Sex: Transgendered

Ethnicity: Caucasian

Location of murder: Chatham, Ontario

Relationship to killer: Husband

Original location of interaction with killer:  Met while Rudavsky was selling dog tags to farmers, Heddington was a farm worker in February of 2002

Cause of death: Stab Wounds

Description of Crime Scene: 

Objects Found at Crime Scene:  

Objects Found with Body:  

Description of Injuries: 

Other descriptors: 

Circumstances

Vulnerabilities

Medical Condition: 

Description of Medical Condition: 

Mental Illness: 

Description of mental illness:

Disabled: 

Description of disability: 

First Nations: 

Substance addiction:  

Sex Worker:  

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2675768/plotsummary

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2242991/Wife-kills-abusive-husband-self-defense-discover-actually-woman-wearing-prosthetic-penis.html

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/woman-kills-abusive-lover-finds-hes-female/article1012914/

Cofell, Jason

Murderer: Jason Cofell

About

About

  • Birth name: 
  • Alias/nickname: 
  • Sex: Male
  • Date of birth:  N/A N/A,
  • Location of birth: 

Physical Description

  • Ethnicity: Caucasian
  • Hair: 
  • Eyes: 
  • Height: 
  • Weight: 
  • Build: 
  • Other descriptors: 

Early Life

  • Birth order: 
  • Number of siblings: 
  • Parent’s marital status: 
  • Father’s occupation: 
  • Abuse by father?:
  • Mother’s occupation: 
  • Abuse by mother?: 
  • Parental substance abuse issues: N/A
  • Traumatic family event: 
  • Age at traumatic family event: 

McDonald Triad

  • History of starting fires:
  • History of animal abuse:
  • History of bed wetting:

Relationships

  • Sexual preference:
  • Marital status:
  • Number of children:

Living arrangements during series:

Lived with spouse: Lived with children: Lived with parents: Lived with room-mate(s):  Lived alone:  Traveled for a living:  Transient: 

Psychological History

  • History of substance abuse: N/A
  • Had received psychological therapy?:
  • Institutionalized for mental illness?:
  • Psychological diagnosis:

Potential Contributors

  • XYY: N/A
  • Physically attractive: N/A
  • Physical defect: N/A
  • Speech defect: N/A
  • Head injury: N/A
  • Physical abuse: N/A
  • Psychological abuse: N/A
  • Sexual abuse: N/A

Education

  • Highest grade completed:
  • Highest degree achieved:
  • Grades at school:
  • IQ:

Employment History

  • Military service: N/A
  • Attempted career in law enforcement: N/A
  • Worked in law enforcement: N/A
  • Types of jobs worked:
  • Fired from jobs?: N/A

The Murders

The Series

  • Time span of series: January,  to January, 
  • Number of victims:
  • Location of murders: Chatham, Ontario
  • Victim profile:
  • Accomplice?: N/A
  • Name of accomplice:
  • Relationship to accomplice:

Profile

  • Murderer category: Spree killer
  • Serial killer sub-type: N/A
  • Serial killer characteristics:
  • Domestic killer sub-type: N/A

Criminal History

  • Committed crimes previous to series?: Yes
  • Description of previous crimes: Stole guns
  • Previously convicted of a crime: N/A

Murder Method

  • Murder method: Shooting, Stabbing
  • Characteristics of crime: N/A
  • Types of sexual assault: N/A

After Death Behaviour

  • Disposal of bodies: N/A

Arrest

  • Date of arrest: 
  • Did killer confess?: N/A
  • What did murderer confess to?: 
  • Date convicted: 
  • Sentence:
  • Status: 

Timeline

The Victims

Jasen Pangburn

Date of birth: 

Date of murder: 

Age at death: 18

Sex: Male

Ethnicity: Caucasian

Location of murder: Chatham, Ontario

Relationship to killer: 

Original location of interaction with killer:  

Cause of death: Gun Shot Wounds

Description of Crime Scene: 

Objects Found at Crime Scene:  

Objects Found with Body:  

Description of Injuries: 

Other descriptors: 

Circumstances

Vulnerabilities

Medical Condition: 

Description of Medical Condition: 

Mental Illness: 

Description of mental illness:

Disabled: 

Description of disability: 

First Nations: 

Substance addiction:  

Sex Worker:  

Alfred Critchley

Date of birth:

Date of murder:

Age at death:

Sex: Male

Ethnicity:

Location of murder:

Relationship to killer:

Original location of interaction with killer:

Cause of death: N/A

Description of crime scene:

Objects found at crime scene:

Objects found with body:

Description of injuries:

Other descriptors:

Circumstances

Vulnerabilities

Medical Condition: N/A

Description of Medical Condition: 

Mental Illness: N/A

Description of mental illness:

Disabled: N/A

Description of disability: 

First Nations: N/A

Substance addiction:  N/A

Sex Worker:  N/A

Virginia Crtichley

Date of birth:

Date of murder:

Age at death:

Sex: Female

Ethnicity:

Location of murder:

Relationship to killer:

Original location of interaction with killer:

Cause of death: N/A

Description of crime scene:

Objects Found at crime scene:

Objects found with body:

Description of injuries:

Other descriptors:

Circumstances

Vulnerabilities

Medical Condition: N/A

Description of Medical Condition: 

Mental Illness: N/A

Description of mental illness:

Disabled: N/A

Description of disability: 

First Nations: N/A

Substance addiction:  N/A

Sex Worker:  N/A

http://www.chathamdailynews.ca/2017/12/07/triple-murderer-becoming-more-integrated-into-society

http://www.chathamdailynews.ca/2016/03/23/jason-cofell-shot-and-stabbed-three-people-in-chatham-in-1991

http://www.wallaceburgcourierpress.com/2016/05/04/triple-murderer-jason-cofell-granted-six-month-residence-in-halfway-house

http://torontosun.com/2015/06/17/triple-murderer-granted-unescorted-passes/wcm/67110afe-5895-47a7-a3e6-732d11b0d202

http://www.theobserver.ca/2017/01/03/compelling-court-stories-drew-national-attention