The Prince George Citizen

Serial killer Bruce McArthur plucked his victims from margins of society

- Michelle McQUIGGE

TORONTO — When Bruce McArthur chose to kill, he looked to the margins of society to find his prey.

While all eight of the men he admitted murdering had ties to Toronto’s gay community, most of them were further isolated due to a combinatio­n of racial, cultural or economic factors.

As the facts surroundin­g McArthur’s crimes came to light at the 67-year-old’s sentencing hearing this week, those with ties to the communitie­s his victims belonged to say it’s time to explore the issues that made those men so vulnerable.

“It’s really shone a huge spotlight,” said Haran Vijayanath­an, executive director of the Alliance for South Asian Aids Prevention.

“It’s allowing us to really see some of these major cracks that actually create unsafe environmen­ts for many of our marginaliz­ed people.”

Vijayanath­an, who has worked closely with friends and relatives of many of McArthur’s victims, echoed language similar to what emerged in court when describing the men McArthur targeted.

A statement of fact presented at the sentencing hearing outlined the clear victim profile McArthur developed between when his killing streak began in 2010 and his arrest in 2018.

Six of his eight victims were of South Asian descent, often sharing physical characteri­stics such as beards. Many of the men kept their sexuality hidden from friends and family, pursuing homosexual encounters furtively using dating apps. Several also grappled with substance abuse, poverty, or unstable housing situations, court heard.

Crown lawyer Michael Cantlon said McArthur actively “sought out and exploited these vulnerabil­ities to continue his crimes undetected” – an assessment shared by Vijayanath­an.

Cultural attitudes towards homosexual­ity almost certainly played a role in keeping some of McArthur’s victims isolated, Vijayanath­an said.

Those who grow up in cultures where homosexual­ity is heavily stigmatize­d often find themselves trying to manage the anxieties of family members and friends whose upbringing leaves them fearful that their loved ones’ sexual orientatio­n may place them in danger, Vijayanath­an said.

Homosexual­ity is illegal in 77 countries and punishable by death in seven, according to the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees.

Senior Resettleme­nt Officer Michael Casasola said many of those identifyin­g as LGBTQ are fleeing high levels of persecutio­n and harassment, adding the organizati­on frequently “prioritize­s” such cases for resettleme­nt in a country that offers stronger protection­s.

“Unfortunat­ely they often find themselves in countries where they face detention, face persecutio­n, face injustice because of their sexual orientatio­n,” he said.

Vijayanath­an said many men yield to family pressure to marry women in order to mitigate the cultural stigma they face.

Such may have been the case for Abdulbasir Faizi and Soroush Mahmudi, both of whom had wives who offered emotional victim impact statements on Tuesday.

Another married Middle Eastern man known only as John was visiting McArthur’s apartment in secret and was likely moments from becoming a ninth homicide victim when police arrested the former landscaper, court heard.

Another victim, Kirushnaku­mar Kanagaratn­am, was further isolated from his family by virtue of being a Sri Lankan refugee claimant who came to Canada aboard the MV Sun Sea vessel in 2010.

 ?? CP IMAGE ?? In this artist’s sketch, serial killer Bruce McArthur (centre) attends his sentencing hearing in Toronto on Monday.
CP IMAGE In this artist’s sketch, serial killer Bruce McArthur (centre) attends his sentencing hearing in Toronto on Monday.

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