Montreal Gazette

Toronto police expect to find more bodies

- DANIELA GERMANO

• More murder charges are expected to be laid against a self-employed landscaper already accused in the presumed deaths of five men, as investigat­ors continue to search properties linked to Bruce McArthur, Toronto police said Wednesday. Police have said that investigat­ors had found two planters with the skeletal remains of three individual­s, but Det. Sgt. Hank Idsinga told reporters Wednesday there are still more than a dozen planters that need to be processed by forensic teams. “We have over a dozen planters and we’re not just grabbing every planter we see. If there is an indication from the canine units that there is some decomposit­ion around that planter, we will grab it,” Idsinga said. “We have been doing that essentiall­y since Saturday, going to different locations. It is quite a time-consuming process.” McArthur, 66, was arrested and charged Jan. 18 in the presumed deaths of Selim Esen, 44, and Andrew Kinsman, 49, who police said went missing from Toronto’s gay village last spring. He was further charged Monday in the deaths of two missing men — Majeed Kayhan, 58, and Soroush Mahmudi, 50 — as well as Dean Lisowick, either 43 or 44, who had never been reported missing. “We believe there are more victims on top of those five,” Idsinga said. “I can’t give you any idea about a number, but I do expect more charges to be laid.” Investigat­ors plan to also excavate part of the lawn at a home in uptown Toronto where McArthur was known to have worked, Idsinga said. He said police have set up heaters on the property where the excavation work will take place to keep the ground from freezing. “There is a specialist who comes in, a forensic anthropolo­gist who does that, and it’s essentiall­y done by hand,” he said. “We can’t go in there with a digger and disturb any of the evidence.” Meanwhile, investigat­ors are also searching the basement of the home on Mallory Crescent, but Idsinga said cadaver dogs did not detect anything that prompted the search. Since McAruthur’s arrest, Idsinga said police have received dozens of tips and are continuing to investigat­e “well over 30” locations linked to him. They also continue to encourage homeowners who hired McArthur to call police so their properties can be searched. Idsinga also said tips have come in from around the world, adding that police may also look into cases where people who have come to the city have not returned to their home countries, as well as homicides outside Toronto. The Toronto Police Service is facing considerab­le backlash for initially shutting down fears in Toronto’s LGBTQ community that a serial killer was prowling the gay village.

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