Pinkus, Lori

Unsolved: The Murder of Lori Pinkus

Any information, contact Toronto Homicide at 416-808-7400, homocide@torontopolice.ca
or Crime Stoppers at 416-222-TIPS (8477), www.222tips.com, text TOR message to CRIMES (274637)
Download the Crime Stoppers App on iTunes, Google Play or Blackberry App World

Lori Pinkus left a bar after having drinks with friends on September 8, 1991, but she never made it home. Her nude body was found strangled in the Brockton High School parking lot by the school caretaker later that morning.

The Case: Facts & Speculations

  • All persons of interest in the case have been ruled out by police
  • Police have strong DNA evidence, but have not been able to make a match (yet)
  • Suspect would be over 50 years-old now

Lori Pinkus, 21, was assaulted, strangled, and left dead in the parking lot of Brockton High School on a Sunday morning in September of 1991. Her body had been displayed on her back with her arms at her sides and her eyes open. She was wearing only a halter top.

The school caretaker found her just before 10 a.m. and several members of a Sikh religious group who met nearby on Sundays saw her body before police arrived.

Lori had just moved to Toronto from Ottawa five months earlier and lived in a basement apartment with her boyfriend a few blocks from the crime scene.

Born in Ottawa, Lori was the youngest of nine children and had a troubled past. She had been stabbed in the chest by two male assailants in her home, but the charges had been dropped after Lori failed to appear in an Ottawa court. A warrant was out for her arrest for failing to appear. 

Lori was addicted to drugs and worked in the sex trade in the Bloor and Lansdowne neighbourhood to support her habit. The school parking lot where her body was found was notorious for drug dealing activities after hours.

Toronto police have collected DNA of her assailant, but have yet to make a match.

Images of the Lori Pinkus Case

Video of the Lori Pinkus Case

Lori Pinkus Map

Possible Suspects

No suspects

McWilliam, Margaret

Unsolved: The Murder of Margaret McWilliam

Any information, contact Toronto Homicide at 416-808-7400, homocide@torontopolice.ca
or Crime Stoppers at 416-222-TIPS (8477), www.222tips.com, text TOR message to CRIMES (274637)
Download the Crime Stoppers App on iTunes, Google Play or Blackberry App World

Margaret McWilliam went for a jog in Warden Woods Park around 7 p.m. on August 27, 1987. Her body was later found in a secluded area. She had been sexually assaulted, beaten and strangled with a piece of her own jogging suit.

The Case: Facts & Speculations

  • Police believe Margaret was not targeted and did not know her assaillant
  • Police believe this was a crime of opportunity (wrong place at wrong time)
  • A very distinctive shoe print was found at the scene of a Korean-made gray and white runner with vinyl tops and the letters AAU on the heel. The shoes were only sold at Bata Shoe Stores in Canada.

A little after 7 p.m. on Thursday, August 27, 1987, Margaret McWilliam was jogging along a path in Warden Woods Park when she was attacked by an unknown assailant and dragged into a secluded area. There he beat, sexually assaulted and strangled her with a piece of her own jogging suit.

Margaret jogged from her basement apartment on Santamonica Blvd north to St. Clair Ave. E., then traveled west towards Warden Woods park where she entered the trail on the southwest side of St. Clair and Warden. Her body was discovered in bush on the east side of the path.

Police believe that she did not sense the attack coming because she was wearing headphones to her walkman at the time.

Margaret, 21,  was a student at Ryerson University and worked part-time as a receptionist and dining room supervisor at Fellowship Towers seniors’ home (now called Davenhill Senior Living). When she did not show up for work on August 28, 1987, her supervisor contacted her landlord who found Margaret’s keys hanging from her doorknob where she had left them to go jogging.

A police dog found her body in the park later that day. Her assailant had punched her in the face leaving bruising and there were signs she fought him during the assault. Police were able to collect DNA samples from cells on her sweater that have lead to a strong profile of her killer, but it has yet to match anyone.

The case, called the “Cinderella Murder” was very high-profile at the time because Margaret had been murdered during broad daylight in a public area.

Map

Images from the Margaret McWilliam Case

Video of the Margaret McWilliam Case

Possible Suspects

Two months after the murder, police provided a sketch of a “potential witness” who left Warden Woods Park after 8 p.m. He was described as a light-skinned black man in his 30s with a thin moustache. He had a muscular build and was wearing a red hat.

Police developed a psychological profile of the killer that said:

  • He would have difficulty communications with and maintaining relationships with women
  • He would work in a low-end job and change jobs frequently
  • Probably uses drugs and alcohol
  • Possible traumatic incident involving his family at the time of the murder, either family violence or some kind of emotional turmoil with his mother

Police do not believe this was his first or last attack, but his DNA has not been matched yet because he is dead or left the country. Police do believe he confessed his crime to someone who has the key to bringing justice to Margaret’s killer.

Isadore, Roxanne

Missing: Roxanne Marie Isadore

Contact Edmonton Police Service Complaint Line at 780-423-4567, EPS File #:13-147142,
or the Edmonton Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477
.

On August 16, 1972, 15-year-old Ingrid Bauer left her Kleinburg around 9:30 p.m. en route to hitchhike to her boyfriend’s house. She was never seen again.

On Aug. 16, 1972, Ingrid Bauer left her home at 9:30 p.m. in Kleinburg (what was then Vaughn) to hitchhike to the home of her boyfriend, Larry Teeple, also 14, in Woodbridge. The distance was only six kms.

Before she left, she told her father she would be home by 10:30 p.m.

Her brother saw her on southbound Islington Avenue. Another witness, Terry Bell, then 18, saw Ingrid walking south on the west side of Islington Ave near Pennon Road about 9:45 p.m.

When Ingrid’s boyfriend called her home and let her family know she never showed up, a frantic hunt began involving 200 volunteers who searched 20-square miles around the Bauer home. Police officers reportedly waded into the Humber River for eight kms. and scuba divers searched an old gravel pit.

She was never found.

Several Kleinburg residents reported hearing the cries of a young person near Islington Avenue and Sevilla Drive around 10 p.m. that night. Residents also told police that they had seen a pickup truck in that area, but a search of the location turned up nothing. There were five original suspects who were all cleared through confirmed alibis.

Map of Kleinburg

Images Ingrid Bauer Case

Video Ingrid Bauer Case

Sources

Bosma, Tim

The Murder of Tim Bosma

Tim Bosma went missing from his Ancaster home after accompanying two men on a test drive of a truck he was selling. He never returned. Dellen Millard and Mark Smich killed him in a field not far from his own home minutes after the truck pulled out of the Bosma driveway.

The Tim Bosma Case

Video of Tim Bosma Case

Sources

Millard, Wayne

The Murder of Wayne Millard

Wayne Millard was allegedly murdered by his son, Dellen, in what was first thought to be a suicide. Police reopened the investigation into his death, and the disappearance of Laura Babcock, after Dellen Millard was found guilty of the first-degree murder of Tim Bosma.

The Wayne Millard Case

Video of Wayne Millard Case

Sources

WAYNE C. MILLARD
Obituary (written by Dellen Millard)
Wayne C. Millard has passed. He is survived by son Dellen Millard. For those who wish to gather in fond memory of Wayne, there will be a reception from 12:00 to 5:00 p.m. on Saturday, December 15, 2012 at Vinsanto Ristorante, 28 Roytec Road, Vaughan, ON. What few words could make comment here… His hope was for a time when cooperation would be the norm and competition was only friendly. He was frugal with himself and generous to others. The only people he feared were racists. He would answer a question with a story. He stepped carefully while advocating carefreeness. He could read and write five languages. He was patient and stubborn. He admired Christ, Gandhi and Lindbergh. He believed animal welfare was a humanitarian effort. He was a good man in a careless world. He was my father. A Master Pilot… Many who knew Wayne Millard, knew him as a pilot. Rightfully so, as he defined himself by the responsibilities of the trade. I now carry his pilot’s license in my wallet. It’s a good photo. Beside it are noted the type certificates he held. It’s a long list from B747s and B757s, to DC3s and L101s, to BH47s and HU500s. For Father piloting wasn’t just his job, it was his freedom. A Humanitarian… Wayne supported, organized, and helped fund many missions on behalf of animal welfare. Sponsor a Dog, the Canadian Flora & Fauna Society, Canadian Wildlife Film Productions, the Sea Shepherd Society and the Toronto Humane Society, only to name a few. He saw a future for mankind where we do not pollute our environment or subjugate animal lives to our industry. He was a man of vision. Yet To Be Realized… His last, still unlaunched, animal welfare mission is accepting donations to the ‘Elizabeth Glass Animal Welfare Fund’, 5 Maple Gate Court, Etobicoke, ON M9C 2K4. He believed we can make a difference in the world. With Wayne in my heart, I believe we must.

Wayne Millard, 71, had just begun massive construction on the largest hangar at the Waterloo International Airport where he planned to relocate Millardair MRO – an aircraft maintenance and services business – he owned and was president of in 2012. That all came to an end when his son, Dellen Millard, found his dead body in his Etobicoke on November 29, 2012.

That day, police received a call from Wayne’s ex-wife and Dellen Millard’s mother, Madeleine Burns, who reported that “her husband had passed away” and “there was blood all over.” Both Millard and Burns were on the scene when police and paramedics arrived at the residence. Paramedics would later testify that Millard seemed very calm.

Wayne was found lying on his side on his bed with his right arm underneath his head and his left arm outstretched. His head rested on a bloodied pillow with curious black, sooty marks on it. The coroner would later find a gun inside a Lululemon bag wedged between the bed and the dresser. Although the gun was the one that took Wayne’s life, there was no way the dead man could have put it there, proving someone else moved the gun after his death.

Wayne’s death was ruled a suicide with cause of death as a self-inflicted gunshot wound through the eye. Experts agree that it is very rare for people to choose the eye as the spot to pull the trigger in suicide cases.

MillardAir & Three Generations of Pilots

Wayne’s father, Carl, founded MillardAir in the 1960s as a charter airline flying out of Toronto Pearson International Airport. By 1990, the airline had gone bankrupt and was transformed into an aircraft maintenance/services business.

Wayne became president of the company in 2006 after the death of his father, and in 2012, was on the cusp of rebuilding MillardAir as a new company when he died.

Previously an airline pilot, Wayne married Madeleine Burns, a flight attendant for Air Canada, and they had one son together, Dellen Millard. Millard had a privileged upbringing and, at 14, became the youngest person to pilot a helicopter and airplane on the same day.

After Wayne and Madeleine divorced, she moved to Kleinburg. Millard would later say his parents’ divorce was emotionally devastating to him.

Before his death, Wayne had begun a relationship with a woman named Janet Campbell, who would later testify that although Wayne suffered from back pain, he was excited about his burgeoning business and not depressed.

Tim Bosma & Laura Babcock

Before Wayne’s death, 25-year-old Laura Babcock had gone missing in July. Babcock was a former girlfriend of Dellen Millard’s. Then on May 6, 2013, Tim Bosma went missing after accompanying two men to test drive a truck he was selling.

Dellen Millard and his accomplice, Mark Smich, were arrested, tried and convicted of the first-degree murder of Tim Bosma. Investigators then decided to reopen the case of Wayne’s death, as well as the disappearance of Laura Babcock.

In 2017, Millard and Smich were both convicted of the first-degree murder of Laura Babcock and sentenced to another 25 years on top of the 25 years they were already serving for the murder of Tim Bosma.