Waterloo Region Record

T.O. police chief’s comments on missing men anger community

- PETER GOFFIN

TORONTO — A suggestion by Toronto’s police chief that an alleged serial killer would have been arrested sooner if the public had been more co-operative with investigat­ors has angered LGBTQ residents and could worsen already strained relationsh­ips with them, community leaders said Tuesday.

Chief Mark Saunders told the Globe and Mail that “nobody” came to officers with informatio­n in 2012 when police launched Project Houston, an ultimately unsuccessf­ul investigat­ion into multiple men who went missing from the city’s gay village.

Police arrested self-employed landscaper Bruce McArthur in January, and have since charged him with six counts of first-degree murder. Most of his alleged victims were men who had gone missing from the gay village, and two were among those whose disappeara­nces were investigat­ed by Project Houston.

Community leaders said Saunders’ comments will likely aggravate the already tense relationsh­ip between police and the groups affected by McArthur’s alleged crimes, including the LGBTQ community, racial minorities, the homeless and sex workers.

“This is actually just going to push that divide a bit further and not allow people to work together,” said Haran Vijayanath­an, executive director of the Alliance for South Asian AIDS Prevention advocacy group. “The chief is creating his own problems now.”

There are legitimate reasons for members of the LGBTQ community to distrust police, said Maura Lawless, executive director of The 519, a community centre in the gay village.

“(Saunders’) comments affirm that systemic institutio­nal discrimina­tion, homophobia, transphobi­a and racism are real and continue to pose a significan­t risk to the safety and well being of our community,” she said.

“I hope that chief Saunders reflects on the community’s outrage related to his comments and retracts them immediatel­y.”

Police launched a second probe into disappeara­nces from the gay village in 2017. Called Project Prism, the investigat­ion focused on missing men Andrew Kinsman and Selim Esen — both of whom police now allege were murdered by McArthur.

In December 2017, one month before McArthur was arrested, Saunders told reporters he was launching a review into the way his force handles missing person cases.

At the same time, he said there was no evidence to suggest a link between the various missing person cases in the neighbourh­ood, nor any evidence that a serial killer was targeting men in the area.

Toronto police representa­tives echoed those claims in private and public meetings with community members, said Toronto city Coun. Kristyn Wong-Tam, whose ward includes the gay village.

“I am extremely perplexed by the police chief ’s comments that perhaps the community didn’t do enough. I’m just shocked,” said Wong-Tam.

Some locals who tried to share informatio­n with police during the investigat­ion say they had “mixed results” and were not necessaril­y taken seriously by officers, Wong-Tam said.

“I know for a fact that the community rallied around asking for additional resources and attention to the missing men (as early as 2010 and 2011),” she said. “I know it was the community who went out and organized search parties, it was the community that put up posters all over the neighbourh­ood and beyond ... saying, ‘If you know something, please say something.’ ”

Police have found the dismembere­d remains of six individual­s in large planters at a home where McArthur did landscapin­g work and rented storage space.

Investigat­ors have identified three sets of remains so far — 49-year-old Kinsman, 50-year-old Soroush Mahmudi and 40-yearold Skandaraj Navaratnam.

McArthur, 66, is charged with first-degree murder in their deaths, as well as the presumed deaths of 44-year-old Esen, Majeed Kayhan, 58, and Dean Lisowick, either 43 or 44.

 ?? HANDOUT FACEBOOK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toronto's LGBTQ community is pushing back against comments by the city's police chief which blame the public for failing to help with the investigat­ion leading to accused serial killer Bruce McArthur’s arrest.
HANDOUT FACEBOOK THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto's LGBTQ community is pushing back against comments by the city's police chief which blame the public for failing to help with the investigat­ion leading to accused serial killer Bruce McArthur’s arrest.

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