National Post

Friends shocked as M.D. charged in doctor’s killing

Body dumped in a suitcase outside Toronto

- Dan Taekema

WINDSOR, ON T. • After an Ontario Medical Associatio­n council meeting last weekend, Windsor, Ont., doctor Darren Cargill bumped into a doctor he hadn’t seen since medical school. The two showed off pictures of their kids and talked about family life before going their separate ways.

Less than a week later, Cargill was scrolling through social media when he saw news that the woman he’d sat down with was dead, her body found in a suitcase near Vaughan, Ont.

“It was nice to catch up and talk about family. She was so full of positivity and optimism,” he said Sunday. “But just a few days later I’m reading that she had died. It was so strange and sad.”

The body of the wellrespec­ted physician, who grew up in Windsor- Essex, was discovered Friday after a region- wide search. According to police sources, she was strangled and hit with a blunt object before her body dumped near Kleinberg, a village about an hour outside of Toronto.

The doctor’s identity can’t be released due to a court-ordered publicatio­n ban.

“We received a call from the mother of the victim expressing concern that she hadn’t heard from her daughter in quite some time ... a body was discovered in a suitcase not far away,” said Toronto police Const. Allyson Douglas- Cook.

Mohammed Shamji, a 40- year- old Toronto neurosurge­on, has been arrested and charged with first-degree murder in connection with the case and appeared in court Sunday.

Douglas- Cook said an investigat­ion into the homicide is ongoing.

Cargill described the doctor as “a bright, fun- loving young woman.” After the council meeting he said she revealed she was getting a divorce, but was staying positive.

“She came across as very confident and upbeat,” he said. “Even when she talked about her divorce she was viewing it as a new beginning for her and her children.”

Cargill, a palliative care specialist at the Hospice of Windsor, is no stranger to death, but he called what happened to the doctor a “tremendous shock” and tragedy that’s left the Ontario medical community in mourning.

“She was such a bright light, it’s horrible,” he said. “You think about how wonderful of a person she was ... to know her life was ended so soon in such a sad way is terrible.”

Throughout the weekend friends and family of the woman took to social media to express their grief. Many changed their profile pictures to a simple sketch of a female doctor holding a baby next to a purple ribbon in her honour.

Alan Saad said he attended St. Peter Elementary School in Tecumseh, Ont. and St. Anne Catholic High School with the woman long before she became a doctor. He said back in Grade 7 their teacher would grant her a time slot every week where she could stand up and share a story she had written.

“She had a great sense of humour and was a great writer, so she was allowed that special time,” Saad explained. “She had us rolling in the aisles. She was so entertaini­ng and funny.”

During high school the two drifted apart, but Saad said he recently reconnecte­d with her through Facebook where she would often post about long-distance running, her husband and how much she loved her kids.

“She was an awesome mother,” he said. “It hurts to see something so terrible happen to such a good person.” On Friday, Saad said he was scrolling through Facebook when he first learned how she died.

“The first thing I thought about were her kids. I have a 16-month-old girl and I can’t imagine her losing a parent in that way.”

 ?? VERONICA HENRI / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Lawyer Liam O’Connor, left, and relatives of Mohammed Shamji, 40, a Toronto neurosurge­on, leave Old City Hall in Toronto on Friday after Shamji’s first court appearance. He is charged with first- degree murder in a woman’s death.
VERONICA HENRI / POSTMEDIA NEWS Lawyer Liam O’Connor, left, and relatives of Mohammed Shamji, 40, a Toronto neurosurge­on, leave Old City Hall in Toronto on Friday after Shamji’s first court appearance. He is charged with first- degree murder in a woman’s death.

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