The Niagara Falls Review

Toronto police end search of accused serial killer McArthur’s apartment

- LIAM CASEY

TORONTO — An exhaustive and exhausting four-month search of alleged serial killer Bruce McArthur’s apartment has concluded, Toronto police announced Tuesday, saying their probe of the unit where multiple murders are alleged to have occurred necessitat­ed painstakin­g forensic examinatio­n.

The scrutiny of the apartment, combined with the search of other related scenes, have made the case the largest forensic examinatio­n in the force’s history, police said.

“Our team is tired, but proud,” said Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga, who is leading the investigat­ion.

McArthur, a 66-year-old selfemploy­ed landscaper, was arrested in January and faces eight counts of first-degree murder in connection with the disappeara­nces of several men, most of whom had ties to Toronto’s gay village.

Police have so far recovered the remains of seven men from large planters at a Toronto home where McArthur worked and stored his equipment.

The forensic work on McArthur’s apartment was extensive, Idsinga said, performed by 10 officers, with two of them on the scene every day since police took over the unit in mid-January.

“You can imagine when you open the door to that place, you’re proceeding inch by inch going into the premises, literally, examining every square inch,” Idsinga said. “It’s extremely labour intensive when you tackle a scene like that.”

Investigat­ors snapped more than 18,000 photograph­s of the apartment in midtown Toronto and seized more than 1,800 items, he said.

Examining McArthur’s apartment also required a different approach from going through a scene where a crime is thought to have recently taken place, as the alleged murders in the case date back several years.

“We’re alleging our oldest murder is over eight years ago, in 2010, and we don’t know if it occurred there or not. But if (alleged victim) Skanda Navaratnam was killed in that residence and there is one hair belonging to Skanda Navaratnam that is still present somewhere, you better find that hair,” said Idsinga.

Idsinga said police completed the search of the apartment on Friday and gave McArthur’s family and his roommate time to clear out belongings before turning the unit over to property management.

Right now, police cadaver dogs — including some from York regional police — are sniffing out about 100 properties both inside and outside Toronto, all with ties to McArthur, Idsinga said. They are about halfway through the three-week process.

“They’re searching the exterior of the premises, obviously looking at flower pots as well,” Idsinga said.

“If the dogs give an indication, if it’s a flower pot we’ll take the flower pot. If it’s an area that we want to do more background work on the place then we’ll make a decision whether to go back with the anthropolo­gist.”

Idsinga wouldn’t say if investigat­ors have found anything.

McArthur is scheduled to return to court May 23.

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