Lethbridge Herald

More remains found on property

- Peter Goffin and Liam Casey THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

Investigat­ors clung to the steep edge of a ravine on Thursday, some on their hands and knees, as they scraped through heaps of dirt and brush searching for more human remains near a home in mid-town Toronto where accused serial killer Bruce McArthur worked as a landscaper.

Some remains were discovered at the property Wednesday afternoon, just hours after police resumed digging in the area for the first time in about five months, said Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga.

“We have work to do ... linking them to the McArthur investigat­ion, but I think geographic­ally, where the remains were found, we’re not going to have much of an issue doing that,” Idsinga told reporters near the site where the remains were found.

Just a few metres away, about 20 police and forensic workers used spades and trowels to scoop compost found in the ravine into large plastic buckets, hauling it down the hill to sieve-like tables where a pair of anthropolo­gists sifted through the detritus.

Investigat­ors have previously found the remains of seven men hidden in large planters at the home. Idsinga said the remains recovered Wednesday could be from one or more of those men.

McArthur, 66, has been charged with first-degree murder in the deaths of eight men with ties to Toronto’s gay village. The remains of only one of those men — Majeed Kayhan — have yet to be found.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada