The Niagara Falls Review

New murder charge laid

Bruce McArthur now charged with murders of six men: Toronto police

- MICHELLE MCQUIGGE and PETER GOFFIN THE CANADIAN PRESS

Toronto police have laid a new murder charge against an alleged serial killer who is believed to have preyed upon men from the city’s gay community for years, bringing the total number of people he’s accused of killing to six.

Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga said Friday that Bruce McArthur has been charged with firstdegre­e murder in the death of 40-year-old Skandaraj Navaratnam, who disappeare­d from the city’s gay village in 2010.

Police have expanded the scope of the already sprawling investigat­ion, Idsinga said, and more charges are expected against 66-year-old McArthur, who was arrested in January.

“There’s multiple outstandin­g murder cases that we’re looking at,” Idsinga told reporters. “There’s hundreds of outstandin­g missing persons occurrence­s that we’re looking at. There’s even some ... occurrence­s where there’s been a sudden death that we’re looking at.”

Navaratnam’s remains were among those of six people recovered from planters at a residentia­l Toronto property where McArthur worked as a landscaper, Idsinga said.

Three of the six sets of remains have now been identified using fingerprin­t analysis and dental records, Idsinga said, adding other confirmed victims are 49-year-old Andrew Kinsman and 50-year-old Soroush Mahmudi.

McArthur has also been charged with first-degree murder in the presumed deaths of 44-year-old Selim Esen, Majeed Kayhan, 58, and Dean Lisowick, either 43 or 44.

Work is underway to identify the three other sets of remains, Idsinga said, noting that police could be dealing with more victims not yet named in the list of charges. He also said police believe they are working with multiple murder scenes.

“We are tracing (McArthur’s) whereabout­s as far back as we can go to see if we can link any outstandin­g occurrence­s to his movements and see where we go from there,” he said.

The investigat­ion into McArthur’s activities, which has been described by police as unpreceden­ted in scope, comprises hundreds of Toronto officers as well as other Canadian and internatio­nal forces.

Police have interviewe­d some of McArthur’s past known associates, but Idsinga said there is no reason to believe that the investigat­ion currently involves a hunt for other suspects.

“I have no evidence that would tell me that anybody else was involved in this,” he said.

Questions around the disappeara­nces of McArthur’s alleged victims had swirled for years prior to his arrest.

Navaratnam, Kayhan and one other man were all reported missing from Toronto’s gay village between 2010 and 2012, prompting calls for action from the community.

Toronto Police launched an investigat­ion in December 2012, dubbed Project Houston, to probe the three disappeara­nces but concluded the effort after 18 months without success.

In 2017, the disappeara­nces of Kinsman and Esen drew fresh outcry from the community.

As recently as six weeks before McArthur’s arrest, Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders tried to dispel fears that a serial killer was at large. He did announce that the force would review its practices in missing persons investigat­ions.

McArthur was charged Jan. 18 with the murder of Kinsman and Esen. About two weeks later, police laid three more firstdegre­e murder charges related to the disappeara­nces of Kayhan and Mahmudi, as well as the death of Lisowick who had never been reported missing.

Investigat­ors have searched multiple properties in the Toronto area, including excavating the back yard at the home where the six sets of remains were found. Idsinga said police may return to that scene in warmer weather to see if police dogs have further success in scouring the area.

He said police have also identified at least two properties for potential excavation, but said forensic test results are needed before they can proceed. Officers have also been combing through McArthur’s central Toronto apartment for a month and expect to remain there for weeks longer, he added.

While the details of the case against McArthur are “disturbing” and “shocking ” to family members of the missing men, Idsinga said some of them have been able to draw some comfort from having answers to questions that have lingered for years.

“It brings them some peace and some closure,” he said.

McArthur is next set to appear in court via video on Feb. 28.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Bruce McArthur is shown in an undated Facebook photo.
FACEBOOK Bruce McArthur is shown in an undated Facebook photo.
 ?? TORONTO POLICE SERVICE ?? Skanda Navaratnam is shown in an undated police handout image. Toronto police have laid a new murder charge against alleged serial killer Bruce McArthur, bringing the total number of men he’s accused of killing to six. Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga says...
TORONTO POLICE SERVICE Skanda Navaratnam is shown in an undated police handout image. Toronto police have laid a new murder charge against alleged serial killer Bruce McArthur, bringing the total number of men he’s accused of killing to six. Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga says...

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