The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘Another sad day in the neighbourh­ood’ where 8-year-old was abducted in 2009

- LIAM CASEY CANADIAN PRESS

WOODSTOCK, Ont. — Members of a southweste­rn Ontario community that is no stranger to tragedy expressed shock and outrage Tuesday after learning that a local nurse was accused of killing eight seniors in her care by using drugs.

Elizabeth Tracey Mae Wettlaufer, 49, of Woodstock, Ont., was charged with eight counts of firstdegre­e murder in connection with the deaths, which police said took place between 2007 and 2014.

“The victims were administer­ed a drug,” said Det. Supt. Dave Truax of the Ontario Provincial Police.

He also said that a number of drugs were stored and accessible in nursing homes.

The victims have been identified as James Silcox, 84, Maurice Granat, 84, Gladys Millard, 87, Helen Matheson, 95, Mary Zurawinski, 96, Helen Young, 90, Maureen Pickering, 79, Arpad Horvath, 75.

Horvath’s daughter, Susan Horvath, said she felt something was amiss before her father died.

“I’d seen my dad and the condition he was in and he had a lot of fear — he had a lot of fear — and just things about him and everything I noticed on his body and stuff, I just had a feeling and I told mom,” Horvath told radio station AM980 in London, Ont., on Tuesday. “And then when he passed on — and how he passed on — that’s when I knew: This is not right.”

Daniel Silcox, of Pontypool Ont., said he found out about his father being among the alleged victims while listening to the radio Tuesday morning.

“We’re living my father’s death right now,” Silcox told The Canadian Press. “It’s horrific.”

Silcox said police had told his sisters about an investigat­ion and briefly interviewe­d one of them, but the family had no idea what it was about.

His father didn’t like living at the home, had broken his hip at the facility, but the family otherwise had no suspicions that his death might have been a murder, Silcox said.

“We don’t want him to become the poster boy of this tragedy but we would like the story out there: (He was) a wonderful man, a World War II vet, just the best father in the world.”

Arpad Horvath lived at a Meadow Park facility in London, Ont., while the other seven alleged victims lived at the Caressant Care Woodstock Long-Term Care Home in Woodstock, Ont. Police said they believe Wettlaufer also worked at other long-term care facilities in the province.

Investigat­ors could not specify which facilities, nor would they speak to a motive.

The Woodstock facility is across the street from where 8-year-old Victoria (Tori) Stafford was abducted in April 2009. Her disappeara­nce and murder captured national attention and left the city of roughly 37,000 people grappling with fear and grief.

Sabrina Sabic, who worked as a student nurse’s aide at the nursing home, stood near the facility with friends shortly after news of Wettlaufer’s arrest broke.

“It’s shocking and sad to know that this happened to so many people and it just seems with my experience there that people working there should have paid closer attention,” the 17-year-old said.

Her mother, Indira Sabic, who lives across the street from the nursing home, said she’s happy her daughter no longer works there, having quit in 2015.

“It’s also so close to where Tori was taken,” Sabic said. “It’s another sad day in the neighbourh­ood.”

As she walked by the nursing home, another resident, Stacey Adams, said she struggled to make sense of the deaths.

“It’s hard to imagine. Did these people suffer? I really hope they didn’t, but for this to happen so close to Tori — I just don’t have words,” she said.

Sam Lamb, 89, expressed shock at news of the murder charge involving Granat, a long-time friend who was an automotive body man in Tillsonbur­g, Ont.

“Wow,” Lamb said. “But I really don’t know what he died of.”

Woodstock Police Chief William Renton recognized that the case might stir up distressin­g memories.

“It’s very difficult for a community to have to endure these types of tragic incidents but the community is strong and the community will rally and we’ll work together to get through it again just as we have in the other major incidents,” he said.

Police said the case marks the highest death toll they have seen in the province since the 2006 massacre of the Bandidos motorcycle gang, which saw eight bikers gunned down at a southweste­rn Ontario farm.

 ?? GEOFF ROBINS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Woodstock Police Chief William Renton speaks at a press conference on Tuesday announcing charges being laid against former nurse Elizabeth Wettlaufer for the murders of eight elderly long term care patients in Woodstock, Ont.
GEOFF ROBINS/GETTY IMAGES Woodstock Police Chief William Renton speaks at a press conference on Tuesday announcing charges being laid against former nurse Elizabeth Wettlaufer for the murders of eight elderly long term care patients in Woodstock, Ont.

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