Truro News

Bruce Mcarthur faces eighth murder charge

Alleged victim from Sri Lanka

- BY PETER GOFFIN AND MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

The complex investigat­ion into alleged serial killer Bruce Mcarthur took another twist on Monday as Toronto police laid an eighth murder charge related to the death of a man who bucked the primary trend in the case.

Unlike Mcarthur’s other seven alleged victims, Toronto police said 37-year-old Kirushna Kumar Kanagaratn­am is not believed to have had ties to the city’s LGBTQ community or a downtown neighbourh­ood known as the gay village.

Like most of the other men the self-employed landscaper is believed to have slain, however, Kanagaratn­am’s remains were recovered from planters at a central Toronto home where Mcarthur once worked.

Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga said Kanagaratn­am’s death has potential to expand the investigat­ion, which he has previously described as “unpreceden­ted” in size and scope.

“This does create basically a wide-open net,” Idsinga said at a news conference. “We’ve had lots of internatio­nal calls since our pleas began from people who just haven’t seen family members in years.”

Idsinga revealed few other details about Kanagaratn­am other than to say he arrived in Canada from Sri Lanka in 2010, lived in the east Toronto suburb of Scarboroug­h, and was never formally reported missing in Canada despite having distant relatives in the Greater Toronto Area.

He said the man was identified through help from an unnamed internatio­nal agency as well as an unusual photograph police released last month.

The heavily edited image showing a bearded man who appeared to be dead was shared with the public as a “last resort,” Idsinga said, adding it prompted hundreds of tips to pour in to police.

Police had been concentrat­ing on 22 potential identifica­tions last week, but Kanagaratn­am was not on the list, Idsinga said. He declined to say how the internatio­nal agency contribute­d to the investigat­ion or how Toronto police came by the photo in the first place.

Mcarthur, 66, was arrested in January and charged with the murders of Andrew Kinsman and Selim Esen, who went missing from Toronto’s gay village in 2017.

Later that month, he was charged with the first- degree murder of Majeed Kayhan, Soroush Mahmudi, and Dean Lisowick. In February, he was also charged in the death of Skandaraj Navaratnam.

The remains of all but Kayhan were found in planters at the home of one of Mcarthur’s landscapin­g clients, Idsinga said, adding Kayhan’s remains have yet to be identified.

While he said police intend to comb at least 70 properties linked to Mcarthur in the coming months, Idsinga declined to say if investigat­ors expect to unearth further alleged victims.

“I think we’ve all seen in the media so-called experts who tell us that serial killers don’t start in their late 50s and their 60s,” Idsinga said. “But then again if we listen to these experts, we’d be looking for a brown-skinned 35-year-old male and that simply isn’t the case, obviously.”

In addition to the new avenues opened up by the discovery of Kanagaratn­am’s remains, police have also expanded the sprawling investigat­ion decades into the past by examining some cold cases.

Idsinga has previously said that investigat­ors are examining 15 unsolved homicides that took place between 1975 and 1997. He said the victims in those cases matched the general profile of the first seven men Mcarthur is accused of killing.

He emphasized, however, that police have not uncovered any evidence to suggest that McArthur’s alleged killing spree began before 2010 when Navaratnam is believed to have died.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Kirushna Kumar Kanagaratn­am is pictured. Alleged serial killer Bruce Mcarthur has been charged with an eighth count of first-degree murder. Police have identified the alleged victim as Kanagaratn­am.
CP PHOTO Kirushna Kumar Kanagaratn­am is pictured. Alleged serial killer Bruce Mcarthur has been charged with an eighth count of first-degree murder. Police have identified the alleged victim as Kanagaratn­am.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada