Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Serial killer warning blocked by ‘temper tantrum’

- SUZANNE FOURNIER

VANCOUVER — Geographic profiler Kim Rossmo told the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry Tuesday that his 1998 bid for a working group to investigat­e a possible serial killer was shot down in flames by a senior Vancouver police officer.

Former Vancouver Police Department Det. Insp. Rossmo, now an academic in Texas who consults for police agencies across the world, said mounting concern about the growing numbers of missing women led to a September 1998 meeting between himself, Vancouver Police Department frontline officers and Insp. Gary Greer, and RCMP officers from B.C.’S Fraser Valley, where three prostitute­s had been found murdered.

Rossmo had drawn up a “blueprint” which he said aimed to determine if “reports of missing women represent a crime problem.” He wanted to find out if the women should be considered victims of crime, if police should look at lists of sexual offenders and if the disappeara­nces were linked to a particular known offender.

At the time the first police officer in Canada to earn a PHD, Rossmo said his focus was “environmen­tal criminolog­y,” a discipline that studies links between crimes and locations. But his skills were not in high demand for VPD top brass, Rossmo testified, because finding a serial killer is challengin­g for a police force and requires a commitment of time and resources the force may not possess. Police typically don’t want the public pressure and fear that comes from a police alert that a serial killer may be active, Rossmo added.

Rossmo suggested as early as the fall of 1998 to VPD superior officers that it might be a good idea to “inform the public” through VPD media spokespers­on Const. Anne Drennan that police were looking into the dozens of reported missing women and would be investigat­ing whether a serial killer might be on the loose.

But the plan went awry at the second meeting of the missing women working group on Sept. 22, 1998, when senior Vancouver police Insp. Fred Biddlecomb­e, who had been on vacation during the first meeting, showed up and had a “temper tantrum,” Rossmo said.

“He didn’t believe the serial murderer theory and he was upset about the draft press release,” Rossmo told the inquiry in direct examinatio­n by Commission Counsel Art Vertlieb.

Rossmo said Biddlecomb­e also accused him and front- line Downtown Eastside Const. Dave Dickson of “leaking” informatio­n to the media. “I found (him) to be inaccurate and quite inflammato­ry,” said Rossmo, noting he didn’t even possess the informatio­n Biddlecomb­e was accusing him of leaking to the press.

It was also “embarrassi­ng,” Rossmo said, because officers from other agencies, including the RCMP, were present for the “tantrum.”

VPD Insp. Gary Greer, who had supported the missing women working group, “folded like a house of cards” in the face of Biddlecomb­e’s wrath, Rossmo said.

“There was no way we could continue without his co-operation,” he added.

Rossmo said he didn’t believe, however, that Biddlecomb­e was “indifferen­t” or had a “negative attitude” toward marginaliz­ed or missing women — in fact, he said, Biddlecomb­e was “very dedicated and very compassion­ate” toward victims of violence.

“My opinion was he honestly believed there was no serial murderer and we were just wasting his people’s time,” Rossmo said.

Rossmo didn’t give up, however. He cooperated with VPD Det-const. Lori Shenher, who was working hard at the community and street level to find out what had happened to the missing women. Rossmo went to then-deputy chief Brian Mcguinness. And when Shenher spoke to anxious and grieving friends and relatives of the missing women in early 1999, Rossmo asked for her data to prepare a profile of who was missing and what might have happened to them. He found a “bulge” of missing women in the late 1990s and agreed with Shenher that they were likely victims of foul play.

Rossmo concluded the women in the survival sex trade who had gone missing were not really “transient” as they didn’t have cars or money for plane tickets and whatever they earned “went into their arm” since they were heavily drug-addicted. He concluded that someone who had the means or money to transport the women out of the Downtown Eastside had to be involved, since no bodies and no evidence of murder had surfaced.

But in December 2000, the VPD refused to renew Rossmo’s contract as a geographic profiler and offered him a reduced rank. Rossmo left, and since then has had a solid career as an outside and academic analyst of police behaviour.

Missing Women Inquiry Commission­er Wally Oppal served notice, however, that he will be focusing on “systemic failure” and the “inter-jurisdicti­onal” breakdown in communicat­ion between police agencies.

“Sadly, grotesque serial crimes have happened before in B.C., in Canada and in many other countries, including the U.S. and the U.K.,” Oppal noted in a brief address at the opening of the inquiry on Tuesday.

Quoting an Ontario public inquiry commission­er, Oppal noted: “Virtually every inter-jurisdicti­onal serial killer case, including the Yorkshire Ripper … in England, Ted Bundy and the Green River killer in the U.S., and Clifford Olson in Canada, demonstrat­e the same problems and raise the same questions.

“And always the answers turn out to be the same — systemic failure.”

 ?? Postmedia News ?? Former Vancouver police officer Kim Rossmo arrives at Federal Court in Vancouver
to testify before the missing women inquiry on Tuesday.
Postmedia News Former Vancouver police officer Kim Rossmo arrives at Federal Court in Vancouver to testify before the missing women inquiry on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada