Lethbridge Herald

Toronto police identify Christine Jessop killer

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A man who died five years ago was the likely killer of a nine-year-old girl in a 1984 murder that sparked widespread revulsion and led to a notorious wrongful conviction, Toronto police said on Thursday.

At a news conference, Chief James Ramer said DNA evidence indicated Calvin Hoover, then 28, had sexually assaulted Christine Jessop and would have been charged with her murder if he were alive. A lawyer for Jessop’s family said they learned from police that Hoover died by suicide in 2015.

Ramer said police were still looking for more informatio­n on Hoover, who had lived near Christine’s family.

“Today’s announceme­nt is only the first very important answer in this ongoing investigat­ion,” Ramer said. “It has obviously generated many more questions.”

Christine, of Queensvill­e, Ont., disappeare­d on Oct. 3, 1984, as she headed to a park after school to meet a friend. Her body was found on New Year’s Eve that year in a farm field about 55 kilometres away.

Lawyer Tim Danson, who has represente­d the Jessop family, said they were in shock and still processing the sudden turn of events.

“There is an emptiness that Calvin Hoover did not answer for his brutal and cowardly crimes in a court of law and thereafter, in a prison cell,” Danson told The Canadian Press. “Suicide was too good for a person who committed such a horrific crime on such a beautiful innocent child.”

Officers met with the Jessop family as well as with Guy Paul Morin, who was wrongfully convicted in the case, before the announceme­nt.

In 1985, police arrested and charged Morin, Christine’s then-24-year-old neighbour, in her killing. Morin was acquitted at his first trial, but convicted of first-degree murder on retrial in 1992 and sentenced to life in prison.

DNA evidence finally exonerated him 1995, prompting the Ontario government to apologize for his prosecutio­n and pay him $1.25-million in compensati­on.

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