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Alleged serial killer's video confession to be revealed in Winnipeg courtroom

- Caitlyn Gowriluk

WARNING: This story con‐ tains distressin­g details.

Jeremy Skibicki unexpect‐ edly confessed to killing three more women in Win‐ nipeg during a lengthy police interrogat­ion as police grilled him about the discovery of the remains of Rebecca Con‐ tois in 2022.

Part of that 20-hour inter‐ rogation video is expected to be shown as evidence this week, as Skibicki's first-de‐ gree murder trial in the deaths of Contois and three other women gets underway.

That video was shown in a voir dire - a sort of trial within a trial to determine the ad‐ missibilit­y of evidence - dur‐ ing pretrial motions in No‐ vember and was previously under a publicatio­n ban.

CBC News can now reveal details about it because the trial is no longer slated to be heard by a jury.

One of the detectives who testified during those pretrial motions told the court he was surprised when Skibicki suddenly said he'd killed four women, including Contois.

"I was shocked at the be‐ ginning.… I kind of froze in my chair," said Det.-Sgt. Adam Danylyshen.

The other detective who was in that interview - Greg Allan, who is set to testify Wednesday - told court he had had no knowledge of three additional killings until Skibicki confessed.

Skibicki, 37, has pleaded not guilty to four counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of Contois and two other First Nations women Morgan

Harris, 39 and Marcedes Myran, 26 - as well as a fourth woman. She is still unidentifi­ed, but has been given the name Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe, or Buffalo Woman, by commu‐ nity members.

This week, his lawyers said they intend to argue that while he admits he killed the women, he was not criminal‐ ly responsibl­e due to mental disorder.

During the police inter‐ view, Skibicki admitted to strangling, choking or drown‐ ing the four women, most of whom he said he met at or near homeless shelters in Winnipeg. He also confessed to performing sex acts on their bodies in his apartment.

While he initially told police he recognized Contois from the Siloam Mission shelter when they showed him her photo, it took some time before Skibicki provided any other details. But hours into the interview, after ask‐ ing to see a priest to "confess [his] sins," he ended up also telling police about the three other killings.

Details on unidentifi­ed victim

The Crown will present a shorter version of the inter‐ view video - just under seven hours long - once Skibicki's trial officially begins on Wednesday, after about a week of additional pretrial motions in the case.

His police interview also sheds light on what Skibicki told investigat­ors about the unidentifi­ed woman known as Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe. That includes the fact he ini‐ tially gave them what he said was her name, only to have police tell him they were able to locate that woman, and she was alive.

Skibicki told police Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe was wearing a Baby Phat brand jacket, which he said he sold on Facebook after he killed her. Photos of that jacket were the only clue Winnipeg police had released to the public to try to identify her.

Skibicki also told detec‐ tives that he dismembere­d some of the women before disposing of their remains in garbage bins, and that he timed some of that with garbage pickup day.

Arrest by tactical team

Court heard Skibicki was ordered to get down on the ground as he was arrested by a police tactical team near a bus stop on Henderson High‐ way in northeast Winnipeg in May 2022, not long after Contois's partial remains were discovered in a garbage bin.

The following month, police recovered more of her remains from the Brady Road landfill in south Winnipeg.

Skibicki told police in his interview that he'd brought other women back to his apartment, but didn't kill them if they logged into his computer to use Facebook. In one case, he said he de‐ cided to let a woman he'd brought to his apartment leave after they had sex and he noticed she was wearing a rosary.

The accused also told police he suffers from bor‐ derline personalit­y disorder and that he struggled with a methamphet­amine addic‐ tion.

Police said their investiga‐ tion determined the uniden‐ tified woman known as Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe was killed on March 15, 2022. She was the first of the women killed, followed by Harris on May 1, Myran on May 4 and Contois on May 15 of that year, according to police.

Investigat­ors believe Myran's and Harris's remains are in the Prairie Green land‐ fill north of Winnipeg, but they've never said where they think Mashkode Bizhik‐ i'ikwe's remains are. They have said only that they be‐ lieve she was Indigenous and in her mid-20s.

In March, the Manitoba and federal government­s each pledged $20 million to‐ ward searching Prairie Green for the remains of Harris and Myran.

Skibicki's trial, before Court of King's Bench Chief Justice Glenn Joyal, is ex‐ pected to continue until June 6.

Support is available for anyone affected by these re‐ ports and the issue of miss‐ ing and murdered Indige‐ nous people. Immediate emotional assistance and crisis support are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week through a national hotline at 1-844-413-6649.

You can also access, through the government of Canada, health support ser‐ vices such as mental health counsellin­g, communityb­ased support and cultural services, and some travel costs to see elders and tradi‐ tional healers. Family mem‐ bers seeking informatio­n about a missing or murdered loved one can access Family Informatio­n Liaison Units.

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