Vancouver Sun

Killer `preyed' on Indigenous women, court hears

- BRITTANY HOBSON

WINNIPEG • A Crown prosecutor says a man who killed four women in Winnipeg staked out homeless shelters and targeted vulnerable, Indigenous victims.

“This case is about a man's hate filled and cruel acts perpetrate­d against four vulnerable Indigenous women,” Renee Lagimodier­e told court Wednesday on the opening day of the trial of Jeremy Skibicki.

He said Skibicki devised a calculated scheme and carefully thought out what he would do to his victims.

“He preyed on these women in Winnipeg shelters and invited them back to his home, where he assaulted them, often sexually, and killed them.

“He engaged in vile, sexual acts with their bodies. He then disposed of the women as though they were garbage.”

The remains of one victim were found in a dumpster and at a landfill in 2022. The remains of two others are believed to be in a different landfill. It's not known where the fourth woman's body is located.

Skibicki, 37, is charged with four counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of Rebecca Contois, Morgan Harris, Marcedes Myran and a fourth unidentifi­ed woman Indigenous leaders have named Buffalo Woman in the early months of 2022.

Defence lawyers have said Skibicki admits to the slayings but should be found not criminally responsibl­e because of a mental disorder The case turns on Skibicki's mental state at the time of the killings.

Law professor Brandon Trask, in an interview earlier this week with The Canadian Press, said such a defence presents multiple challenges.

Once a mental illness has been establishe­d, Trask said, it comes down to whether the diagnosis made Skibicki incapable of knowing the slayings were wrong.

“This is not the sort of a case where there's a single victim, a single moment in time. This is a situation involving four victims across presumably a lengthier period in time,” said Trask, an assistant professor of law at the University of Manitoba. “This is going to be very challengin­g for the defence, very complex and very technical.”

Both sides have told court they plan to call expert witnesses.

Trask said there is not the same need to provide proof beyond a reasonable doubt as there is with a criminal conviction. The measure used for a finding of not criminally responsibl­e is 50 per cent plus one that the accused most likely did not understand what he was doing was wrong.

The defence told court Monday that Skibicki doesn't contest the killings and is pursuing a not criminally responsibl­e defence. The Crown then agreed to have the case heard by a judge alone.

 ?? JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Relatives of murdered women arrive at the trial of Jeremy Skibicki in Winnipeg on Tuesday.
JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS Relatives of murdered women arrive at the trial of Jeremy Skibicki in Winnipeg on Tuesday.

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