Ottawa Citizen

Man admitted killing: police

Drug dealer appears in court charged with murdering Ottawa sex worker

- MEGHAN HURLEY AND ANDREW SEYMOUR

The drug dealer charged with first-degree murder in the death of an Ottawa sex worker wasn’t a suspect in the case until he approached guards at the jail where he was doing time and asked to speak to a homicide detective.

“It’s extremely rare,” said Insp. John Maxwell of Ottawa police. “I don’t think I’ve seen this before.”

Adrian Daou, 22, was “calm and collected” before appearing in court to face a charge for the August 2010 killing of Jennifer Stewart, his lawyer said Wednesday.

An unshaven Daou surveyed the courtroom before giving a justice of the peace his name during the brief appearance. Wearing a dark green winter coat, baggy black jeans, Doc Martens-style boots and leg shackles, Daou stood with his hands at his side and his head tilted back before being remanded to jail.

Daou nodded when Justice of the Peace Linda Pearson told him not to communicat­e with three people, including one of Stewart’s relatives. He will next appear in court by video from jail on March 7.

“He’s calm and collected. We’ll deal with the charge. He’s fine,” said lawyer Bob Carew outside court.

Carew wouldn’t comment when asked about whether the twice-convicted drug dealer, who is serving a ninemonth sentence for possession of drugs for the purpose of traffickin­g and failing to appear in court, had confessed to the killing to police.

Carew said Daou had contacted him for legal advice Tuesday.

“How co-operative has he been with police?” Carew was asked.

“You’ll have to ask police,” replied Carew.

However, police sources say Daou gave a full confession, including details that only investigat­ors knew, and offered police informatio­n that filled in some blanks in the investigat­ion.

Daou told police he came to them with his confession because he had a guilty conscience.

He was charged with first-degree murder after police consulted with a Crown attorney.

None of Daou’s family was in court for his appearance, although a small group of his friends was present. There did not appear to be any relatives of Stewart present.

Stewart, 36, was found lying faceup in the dirt in a Vanier parking lot in August 2010. She had been stabbed in the head, legs and wrists.

At the time, her aunt told the Citizen that Stewart had turned to prostituti­on to feed her crack addiction but denied her addiction to her family.

“We offered help and she pushed us away,” Nicole Chenier said in 2010. “She didn’t want help. She looked me in the eye and lied about her addiction.”

Stewart had been convicted of prostituti­on-related offences four times.

Daou was sentenced two weeks ago to eight months in jail after pleading guilty to two counts of possession for the purpose of traffickin­g.

He received an additional 30 days for failing to appear in court and breaching his release conditions. He was ordered to provide a sample of his DNA and was banned from possessing weapons for life.

The drug dealing occurred in January 2012.

In March 2012, he had been sentenced to 15 days in jail in Kingston for a theft under $5,000, according to court records. He also had a 2010 conviction — just two months after Stewart’s killing — for drug traffickin­g in Kingston. He avoided jail, receiving a nine-month conditiona­l sentence to be served in the community.

The charge against Daou comes three weeks after another man was charged with first-degree murder in two of Ottawa’s other unsolved prostitute killings.

On Feb. 6, Marc Leduc, 56, was charged in the 2011 killing of Leeanne Lawson, 23, and the 2008 killing of Pamela Kosmack, 39. (Kosmack’s family maintains she was not a sex worker.)

It’s been 14 months since then-Ottawa police chief Vern White called a news conference to talk about a “pattern” that investigat­ors had identified in the killings of city sex workers.

The charges against Leduc, who was linked to the deaths through DNA, were the first major break in those cases.

There are three other unsolved sex-worker killings in Ottawa and another in Gatineau.

Melinda Sheppit, 16, was found partially clothed in a Dumpster in a Murray Street parking lot on Sept. 30, 1990. She had been strangled and was missing a shoe.

Sophie Filion, 23, was only wearing a slip when she was found stuffed into two garbage bags in a Westboro parking lot on Dec. 3, 1993. She died from strangulat­ion.

Carrie Doloris Mancuso, 32, was found dead in her Lafontaine Avenue apartment on Sept. 7, 1995. She was killed by asphyxiati­on, but it’s unclear if she had been strangled.

Kelly Morrisseau, 27, was found naked and bleeding from at least 12 stab wounds in a parking lot near Gatineau Park in 2006. Morrisseau died in hospital. She was pregnant.

Anyone with informatio­n is asked to contact the Ottawa Police Major Crime Section at 613-236-1222 ext. 5493 or Crime Stoppers at 613-2338477.

 ?? SARAH WALLACE/OTTAWA CITIZEN ?? Adrian Daou, 22, appeared in court Wednesday on a charge of first-degree murder.
SARAH WALLACE/OTTAWA CITIZEN Adrian Daou, 22, appeared in court Wednesday on a charge of first-degree murder.
 ?? MIKE CARROCCETT­O/OTTAWA CITIZEN ?? Robert Carew, lawyer for Adrian Daou, speaks to reporters outside the Elgin Street courthouse.
MIKE CARROCCETT­O/OTTAWA CITIZEN Robert Carew, lawyer for Adrian Daou, speaks to reporters outside the Elgin Street courthouse.
 ??  ?? Jennifer Stewart’s August 2010 stabbing death was unsolved until Adrian Daou was charged.
Jennifer Stewart’s August 2010 stabbing death was unsolved until Adrian Daou was charged.

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