The Hamilton Spectator

Millard victim gets pushed to margins again

How Laura Babcock’s disappeara­nce was handled should have been a part of Toronto police review

- Susan Clairmont CITY EDITOR: CHERYL STEPAN, 905-526-3420, cstepan@thespec.com Susan Clairmont is a Hamiltonba­sed crime, court and social justice columnist at The Spectator. sclairmont@thespec.com

I remember sitting on the floor at a packed news conference at Toronto police headquarte­rs in June 2013 listening to a homicide detective describe Laura Babcock.

She was mentally unwell. An escort. Transient. Troubled. She used drugs.

She had, by this point, been reported missing nearly a year earlier.

In actuality, she wasn’t just missing. She had been murdered and incinerate­d by serial killer Dellen Millard and accomplice Mark Smich.

Millard would go on to murder his father, Wayne Millard, by shooting him in the face in his own bed. The pair would then murder Ancaster’s Tim Bosma, taking him for a test drive of the truck he was selling, shooting him within minutes of leaving his driveway and then burning his remains.

That high-profile media conference was held by Toronto police to announce they were taking a second look at the cases of Laura and Wayne, both of which fell under Toronto’s jurisdicti­on.

Laura’s missing person file had become dormant.

Wayne’s death had been ruled a suicide.

Had Toronto police done a proper investigat­ion into Laura’s disappeara­nce, perhaps Wayne and Tim might still be alive.

By now — the day of that news conference — Hamilton police had arrested Millard and Smich and charged them with Tim’s murder.

Listening to the detective at the podium, it struck me that the debasing portrait he was painting of Laura, 23, was not meant to elicit new tips or further the investigat­ion. It was offered up as an excuse for why police had failed to do their job when she first went missing.

Nevermind that her family was frantic. Or that her former boyfriend told police he suspected Millard was behind her disappeara­nce. Or that investigat­ors never interviewe­d Millard or checked Laura’s phone records, which showed her last call was to the burgeoning serial killer.

The implicatio­n was that Laura was the kind of person who disappeare­d.

Toronto police neglected their duty to properly investigat­e Laura’s case because she was a young woman who lived on the margins of society. She was powerless. She was vulnerable. She wasn’t a priority. Flash forward to now and she also wasn’t even mentioned in a report released Tuesday called “Missing and Missed: A Report of the Independen­t Civilian Review into Missing Person Investigat­ions.”

The 161-page document was ordered by the Toronto police services board and carried out by Gloria J. Epstein, a former judge with the Court of Appeal for Ontario.

“An examinatio­n of missing person investigat­ions contribute­s to a larger conversati­on,” the report says, “one that is about the role of police in serving our diverse communitie­s.”

The review focuses on the missing-person cases of men preyed on by a serial killer who targeted victims in Toronto’s Gay Village. It also mentions other victims: one trans woman and several Indigenous men who were missing and found dead.

But nothing of Laura.

I asked the Toronto police board why she wasn’t included. I was told the mandate of the review was guided by a working group selected after input from organizati­ons that work with “sex workers, harm reduction and homeless population­s and groups representi­ng Indigenous people and LGBTQ communitie­s, including the Alliance for South Asian AIDS Prevention.” The group then drafted its terms of reference, which the police board approved.

The terms were for the review to look at “the process by which people are reported missing (or not), the manner in which missing person reports are received and investigat­ed by the service, and the relationsh­ip between the Toronto Police Service, the LGBTQ2S+ communitie­s, and other communitie­s as is relevant to missing person investigat­ions.”

Laura’s disappeara­nce occurred during the time men were disappeari­ng from the Gay Village.

The report says: “Our goal must be to ensure that no one is treated in a less adequate way because of marginaliz­ation and vulnerabil­ities whether based on sexual orientatio­n, gender identity or expression, colour, ethnic origin, immigratio­n status, homelessne­ss or being under housed, socioecono­mic status, or mental health.”

I am grateful the report included the victims it did. Their loved ones and communitie­s deserve answers — we all do — and Toronto police need to be held accountabl­e and be forced to do better.

But I am disappoint­ed Laura was once again pushed to the margins.

She deserves inclusion and there is much we can learn from the mistakes that were made.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? Toronto police neglected their duty to properly investigat­e Laura Babcock’s case, writes Susan Clairmont.
FAMILY PHOTO Toronto police neglected their duty to properly investigat­e Laura Babcock’s case, writes Susan Clairmont.
 ??  ?? Scan to read more columns from The Spectator’s Susan Clairmont.
Scan to read more columns from The Spectator’s Susan Clairmont.
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