Cape Breton Post

Sadie Rogers’ murder remains unsolved

Amherst woman was found dead in her home in 1981

- BY SALTWIRE NETWORK STAFF

It has been 36 years since Sadie Rogers was murdered in her Cordova Street home and RCMP are no closer to solving the murder today than they were in 1981.

“The investigat­ion into the homicide of Sadie Rogers remains open. We have not made any arrests or laid charges, but we continue to investigat­e the file,” Cpl. Jennifer Clarke of the RCMP said in an email to the Amherst News this week.

“The challenge with a case like this is it has been (36) years since Ms. Rogers’ homicide was reported to police. With the passage of time it makes it challengin­g as memories fade and potential witnesses become more difficult to locate.”

The 80-year-old Rogers lived alone and worked as a housekeepe­r. A neighbour last saw her on Sept. 26, 1981. Nearly a week later, neighbours were becoming concerned that they had not seen any activity at her residence and contacted police.

On Oct. 2, police discovered her body inside her home at 112 Cordova St., Amherst. She had been stabbed multiple times.

While there have been some leads and tips over the years, including anonymous pencilwrit­ten letters to the Amherst Daily News in 2006 and 2007, all has been quiet since 2011 when the RCMP Northeast Nova major crime unit issued a press release asking for tips.

Despite this, police are hoping someone comes forward with informatio­n on the file.

“Historical homicides and missing persons files are reviewed when new informatio­n comes forward. In the absence of new informatio­n we review them periodical­ly. We continue to encourage the public to report any tips and informatio­n about this incident to the RCMP to help us solve this case and bring closure for Ms. Rogers’ family,” Clarke said.

In a September 2006 interview with the Amherst newspaper, Rogers’ niece, Dorothy Snowden said she remembered the terrible day her aunt was killed.

“To this day I keep asking myself why would someone do something like this? She didn’t deserve to die like that. She had every right to live.”

Snowden said family believed it was someone who knew the house from the way they went

in. She said the murderer “took the glass out of the front door, reached in and unhooked the latch.”

In 2006, on the 25th anniversar­y of the murder, RCMP released photos of Rogers and made an urgent plea to the community for assistance in solving the crime.

The late Doug Harkness, who was editor of the Amherst paper at the time of the murder, said in a 2006 interview that robbery was suspected as the motive for the crime.

Two years later, in 2008, Rogers’ case was added to the Department of Justice major rewards program and anyone providing informatio­n on the crime that leads to an arrest and conviction is eligible for a reward of up to $150,000.

Anyone with informatio­n on the murder can call police or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-2228477.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Sadie Rogers was murdered 36 years ago in her Amherst home.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Sadie Rogers was murdered 36 years ago in her Amherst home.

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