The Hamilton Spectator

Van rampage latest in ‘long haul’ for homicide squad

‘I’ve never seen three cases like this back to back,’ chief says

- LIAM CASEY

TORONTO — The man in charge of Toronto’s homicide squad was sitting in his office early Monday afternoon when word came in about mass casualties in the city’s north end.

Insp. Bryan Bott swiftly put together a team of 16 homicide detectives who were immediatel­y dispatched to Yonge Street, where a white van had driven into pedestrian­s, killing 10 and injuring 14 others.

When the homicide team arrived on location, they found bodies, shoes and debris scattered along a twokilomet­re stretch of road.

They were joined by hundreds of officers from Toronto and the surroundin­g area.

By Wednesday morning, the massive crime scene had been processed and the street reopened.

But the laborious work for the homicide squad had just begun.

“Usually our guys will work around the clock for 48 hours then they have to get some sleep and we cycle people in and out,” Bott said in an interview Wednesday.

“It’s been a long haul. It’s going to be a long haul.”

The “long haul” for Bott’s team began on Dec. 15, when a billionair­e couple — Barry and Honey Sherman — were found dead in their Toronto mansion. The investigat­ion is ongoing and no arrests have been made.

A month after the Shermans’ deaths, another massive homicide investigat­ion was triggered by the arrest of alleged serial killer Bruce McArthur, a 66-yearold self-employed landscaper accused of murdering eight men — most with ties to the city’s gay village.

That investigat­ion is set to soon expand exponentia­lly with officers fanning out around the city and across the province to search 70 properties linked to McArthur, who allegedly hid some of the men’s remains in planters.

“I’ve been with the service for 31 years, and I’ve never seen three cases like this back to back, ever,” said Bott, who in addition to keeping an eye on the highprofil­e cases, tries to make sure his detectives get enough sleep.

“We’re hanging in there,” he said, acknowledg­ing that his team received a lot of help from other forces after Monday’s shock occurrence.

Ontario Provincial Police, York Regional police and Peel Regional police helped traffic reconstruc­tion investigat­ors to trace the movements of the white van.

The pressure on the squad was relieved somewhat after Alek Minassian, the alleged van driver now facing 10 first-degree murder charges, was arrested without incident just seven minutes after the first 911 call, said Bott.

There are 48 homicide detectives on the squad plus three others on the cold case squad, he said.

They are arranged in six units that investigat­e homicides on a rotating basis. In addition to investigat­ing active cases, the detectives also have to shepherd their other cases through court.

The pressure on the Sherman case was unrelentin­g for months, Bott said, with 16 homicide detectives assigned to the case initially.

“We scaled it back,” he said. Det. Sgt. Sue Gomes, the lead in the case, remains committed to the Sherman case full time, he said, but some other detectives had to go back on the board.

On Saturday, some of those investigat­ors began digging into the homicide of a 23-year-old who was stabbed to death Saturday in the city’s east end, Bott said.

On Thursday, police released the identity of a suspect in that case and issued a Canada-wide arrest warrant for first-degree murder.

“Once that’s taken care of, they’ll go back and assist (Gomes) on the Sherman case,” Bott said.

Meanwhile, the McArthur investigat­ion is also going full steam ahead, led by Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga.

Bott said he talks frequently with his counterpar­t with the Ontario Provincial Police, who have assisted in the Sherman and McArthur cases, and also provided officers following Monday’s van attack.

“Everyone wants to help,” he said.

“We didn’t have to make the call on Monday, our partner agencies just called and offered.”

 ?? GALIT RODAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A photo of Anne Marie D'Amico, killed in the van rampage, is left at a vigil on Yonge Street in Toronto.
GALIT RODAN THE CANADIAN PRESS A photo of Anne Marie D'Amico, killed in the van rampage, is left at a vigil on Yonge Street in Toronto.

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