Canadian True Crime - Robert Pickton: The Final Chapter [1]
Episode Date: January 19, 2026A brand new four-part series. In 2024, Canada’s most prolific serial killer was murdered in prison in an act of vigilante justice. The final chapter of Robert Pickton may now be closed, b...ut the story is far from over. Pickton confessed to murdering 49 women on his pig farm near Vancouver, many of them sex workers and Indigenous women. The evidence suggests he did not act alone. -----Part 1 begins by tracing a disturbing childhood on the Pickton farm where cruelty was normalized, morality was optional and vulnerable people were exploited and intimidated. It also tracks how that culture escalated after Robert and his brother took over the farm, and the many police failures that followed.This series revisits the entire case to date, moving past the grotesque caricature of a lone monster in buddy boots, and restores the humanity of the women targeted through personal stories of those who loved them. It examines the culture and systems that failed them for so long, leaving their loved ones with many unanswered questions — and a prevailing sense of injustice.This miniseries draws primarily from court records, historical news archives, investigative journalism, personal interviews and the Missing Women Inquiry final report.CONTENT WARNING: this series includes graphic details that will be distressing for many listeners to hear, including mention of sexual assault, residential schools, Indigenous issues, child abuse and suicide. Crisis referral services:Free National Indian Residential School Crisis Line: call 1-866-925-4419 toll freeHope for Wellness free chatline - 1-800-721-0066 or using the chat box on the websiteGovernment of Canada Crisis and Mental Health support Resources for Sexual assault survivorsCanadian True Crime donates monthly to those facing injustice. Proceeds from this series are being donated to the WISH Drop-in Centre Society, supporting street-based sex workers on Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside since 1984.Full list of resources, information sources, and more:www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi, I'm Christy Lee, and welcome to episode 200 of Canadian True Crime. I started this podcast nine years ago as a passion project,
and it still is today. So thank you so much for joining me. This special four-part series has been
pieced together primarily from the public record, including court documents, newspaper archives,
the final report of the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry, and On the Farm,
the definitive book by the late award-winning investigative journalist Stevie Cameron.
Please be aware this series includes distressing details that might be difficult to hear.
also mention of sexual assault, residential schools, indigenous issues, child abuse and suicide.
Please see the show notes for Crisis Referral Services. Proceeds are being donated to the Wish
Dropin Center Society, supporting street-based sex workers on Vancouver's downtown Eastside since
1984. It's a cold night in March of 1997 and a 30-year-old woman named Wendy is working a street
corner in Vancouver's downtown east side. Often referred to as the poorest postal code in Canada,
the downtown east side is known for high concentrations of poverty, homelessness, mental illness,
hazardous substance use, crime and sex work. A red pickup truck pulls up to the corner.
The driver is in his late 40s, balding, with greasy, scraggly hair hanging down the back and
sides. He asks Wendy how much she charges for oral sex. She tells him the going rate is
$40. He offers her $100 if she comes back to his place in Port Coquitlam. Wendy needs the money,
but that's about a 40-minute drive-away. Can't they find somewhere closer? The driver insists,
promising to drop her back by one in the morning. She gets into the pickup and they drive out of the
city. The man doesn't want to make conversation. After a while, the silence starts making Wendy
uneasy. She might only be 30, but she's already lived a far heavier life than her years suggest.
Wendy started using drugs in her teens and joined forces with two men 10 years older than her with
criminal records. They would be arrested for stealing cigarettes and other goods. She gave birth to a
daughter with one of those men, but according to an obituary, their little girl passed away as a
toddler. Wendy retreated to drugs for a while, but she pulled herself together.
Vancouver is a port city, and she found a job on a local fishing boat as a deckhand and
crew cook. She fell into a relationship with the captain and gave birth to two children with him.
For a few years, Wendy's life was mostly stable, but the urge to use was not easy to overcome.
The relationship broke down, and she left her children with their father to get help for hazardous substance use.
Cocaine and heroin were her drugs of choice, but she was also desperate to see her kids again.
Wendy ended up living on Vancouver's downtown east side with some of society's most vulnerable,
marginalized people, trying and failing miserably to get clean. That cold night in March of 1997,
she was stuck in survival mode, sustaining her drug use through stealing and outside sex work.
In the red pickup truck, Wendy is feeling increasingly uneasy as they continue driving out to Port Coquitlam,
or at least that's where the man told her they were going.
She asks him to stop at the next gas station so she can use the washroom.
He refuses and continues driving silently.
The man stops the truck at a property with a padlocked gate.
He gets out, unlocks the gate and drives in.
Wendy realizes the man lives on a farm, not a house.
There's old cars and junk everywhere.
He parks beside a mobile trailer home and ushers Wendy.
inside. It's filthy in there. The air is stale and there's mess everywhere. She notices a large
butcher knife lying on the table as he leads her through the kitchen and into a back room. There's
no bed, only a sleeping bag on the floor. The man gives Wendy the hundred dollars and she performs
oral sex, followed by intercourse. Nothing out of the ordinary. She gets dressed and asks to use the
phone to call a friend. She senses the man behind her, and he gently takes her left hand. Then,
without warning, he snaps a handcuff onto her wrist. Wendy is jolted by an intense fear for her life.
For a split second, she freezes. Then her body's trauma response activates, automatically deferring
to habits she learned earlier in life, and Wendy has always been a fighter. She punches,
and kicks him. She grabs a potted plant and whatever she can reach and swings it at him. As he fights back,
she finds herself backing toward that butcher knife she saw on the kitchen table. She grabs it and
slashes the man across the neck. He roars as the blood starts flowing, but he grabs a cloth,
holding it to the wound and keeps fighting. Now there's an intense struggle for the knife,
and Wendy suddenly feels herself losing consciousness.
When she comes to, the man is over her, holding her down,
and they're now back outside the pickup truck.
She's still gripping the knife in her right hand and jabs at him,
screaming at him to let her go.
She feels him weakened and seizes an opportunity to slide out from under him.
Still holding the knife, she staggers down the driveway,
covered in blood. Wendy doesn't realize she has suffered catastrophic injuries because adrenaline
has taken over, numbing the pain and keeping her moving with a singular focus, escape.
Terrified he's going to come after her, she limps across the street and knocks on a house.
No answer. She tries to break a window to get inside, but then she sees headlights approaching.
It's him. She ducks down.
But as the car gets closer, she sees it's not him, and there's a woman in the passenger seat.
Feeling safer, Wendy runs out and screams for help.
The car stops. It's an elderly couple, but they hesitate at the sight of this small woman,
half-naked, soaked in blood, with her internal organs exposed, holding a knife.
Wendy throws it on the ground, and the man opens the back door and helps her into the car.
As they call 911 for police and an ambulance, Wendy points toward the farm.
She tells the couple that if anything happens to her, the man living in the trailer there was
responsible and he's been injured too.
Wendy is rushed to emergency surgery with significant blood loss, deep stab wounds to her
abdomen and a punctured lung. She's lucky to be alive.
Wendy would have known that an increasing number of women just like her
had been disappearing from the downtown east side in recent years.
That's why she was on high alert.
What she didn't know was that the DNA or remains of at least seven of those women
were already on the farm she just escaped from,
waiting to one day be discovered, and there would be more to come.
Years later, when Robert Picton was identified as the man now considered Canada's worst serial killer,
the remains or DNA of 33 missing women would be found on that farm.
Most of them were sex workers, disproportionately indigenous, and thought of as expendable, disposable,
not worthy of care.
It's believed there were many more victims than that, and years later, Robert Picton
would confirm it himself. When the details began to emerge about how their remains may have been
handled and disposed of, the implications were so shocking and grotesque that many struggled to even
grasp what they were hearing. This case has been described as a tragedy of epic proportions,
leaving the families of all those women with a lasting legacy of grief, at least 98 children
without their mother and a lot of unanswered questions.
In 2004, Robert Pickton became a victim himself of prison vigilante justice.
His death might have closed his chapter, but this story is far from over.
The evidence suggests that others knew what was happening, and worse, he likely did not act
alone. This special four-part series traces the case from the very beginning right up to where
it stands today, from a disturbing childhood on the Picton family farm where cruelty and
exploitation were normalized and morality optional, where Robert and his brother were shown that
bad deeds can be covered up using privilege and intimidation to the blatant police failures
systemic injustice and deep-rooted societal prejudice that enabled that violent culture to continue
long after the Picton parents were dead. Most importantly, this series centers the vulnerable
women who were targeted, restoring their names, stories and humanity through the personal
accounts of those who loved and missed them, making space for the unanswered questions still
being asked to this day. We'll be back in just a moment.
moment to begin. Robert William Picton was born in 1949 to parents Leonard and Louise
Picton. They were pig farmers who lived in Port Coquitlam, a city in the Metro Vancouver area
about 35 minutes drive from downtown. They didn't live on the property we now know as the
Picton farm though. Leonard had inherited his family's homestead and farm a few
kilometers away and worked on it through his 20s and 30s showing no other interests.
When he was 47 years old, he surprised his family by bringing home a much younger woman he'd
met in a coffee shop. Her name was Louise Arnold. She was 31 years old and from Saskatchewan.
They got married and Louise moved into the Picton family homestead. Five years later,
the couple had their first child, a daughter, Linda, in 1948,
then first son Robert, followed by second son David, a year apart.
Linda and David were said to take after their mother Louise, physically anyway,
short with round faces.
The middle child, Robert, or Willie, as his family started calling him,
took after Father Leonard, tall and slim, with a narrow face and a long,
pointed nose. The Picton family lived in Port Coquitlam, known as Poco by the locals.
Today, the city has a population of almost 60,000 people, but back in 1949, it was around
3,000. It was known for being rural farmland territory. Leonard Pickton was reportedly a workaholic
who had minimal interaction with any of his three children. He was not an engaged,
He specialised in livestock in the production of pork
and expected sons Robert and David to work on the farm as soon as they were able to,
aiding in the slaughtering and butchering of pigs.
Some accounts by neighbours and co-workers paint Leonard as a violently abusive and abrasive man,
all too ready to dole out punishment to his sons in the form of beatings.
It seems that daughter Linda might have been spared from the street.
treatment. In later interviews, she would portray Leonard in a positive light as a respectable
father with good intentions. But she said her younger brother Robert was never close to his father.
In fact, he seemed a bit scared of him. Linda described Robert as shy and naive, a mama's boy.
Robert himself would later say that he and his mother were like two peas in a pod.
The reasons for that label are not entirely clear.
In town, residents reported hearing Louise nag and publicly shame Robert in front of other children.
He became increasingly withdrawn, often remaining silent for long stretches and hiding when he feared he was in trouble with either parent.
The responsibilities of homemaking and child wearing fell to Louise Picton by default,
and she was not a nurturing or maternal presence to any of their three children.
Her focus was also on the family business, pigs.
Everything else came a distant second.
As a mother, Louise was remembered as harsh and abrasive
and was frequently heard screeching orders at her children.
Those who came into regular contact with her
described her as odd, eccentric, an unkempt workaholic who paid
little attention to her own health or appearance. Former neighbours recalled her rotting teeth
and apparent indifference to personal hygiene. The children were reportedly bathed only about once a week,
which wasn't enough to remove the farm stench. Those same neighbours went inside the Picton home
briefly and would describe it as dirty and foul smelling. Farm animals were allowed to wander freely
through the farmhouse, relieving themselves indoors without consequence.
Louise made little effort to clean, seemingly unfazed by the conditions.
She always wore men's rubber gumboots.
Louise was strict and demanding.
She required her children to spend long hours slopping pigs and caring for animals,
sometimes even on school days.
To outsiders, the Picton family appeared to.
to be poor, living below the poverty line. As one local resident put it, everyone knew the
Pictons and no one knew the Pictons. The reality was they owned the family homestead outright
and some additional parcels of land and the farm was profitable. They just chose to live that way.
It was said that the general attitude of the Picton family was that there was nothing wrong
with a bit of mess, or a lot.
Many of the memories Robert Picton would recall from his childhood and early adulthood
were disturbing, if true.
He would claim that one time his father left him sitting in his truck,
and he accidentally moved the gear stick into neutral,
which caused the truck to start rolling down a hill and crash.
Robert would claim his father beat him severely for not stopping that truck.
He was just three years old at the time.
In another story, he recalled being about four years old
when his mother Louise caught him smoking a cigarette.
As punishment, she forced him to smoke a whole cigar,
thinking it would cure him for good.
And it did.
Robert would say it was the last cigarette he ever had.
He would also tell a particularly disturbing story later
about a pet calf he had when he was.
young. This was noteworthy because he suddenly became animated when he remembered the calf story
and recalled vivid details. According to Robert, when he was about 12, he developed a close
emotional attachment with this calf, spending as much time as he could with it day or night. One day
he came home from school to find his favourite animal was missing. He looked over the house and then
the farm and he asked his family members, where's my calf? He was horrified when they suggested he
look in the barn, knowing that's where the animals were slaughtered. It seemed his family wanted him to
discover his pet calf hanging upside down in a shed, slaughtered and disemboweled. Robert would tell
investigators he was distraught at the site and refused to speak to his family for four days. They
promised to buy him a new calf, but he didn't want a new one. He wanted his pet back. He was
traumatized by the incident, and even as an adult, it was only something he would share with people
he'd become close to. After that, he seemed to develop the sentiment that life goes around and
around with little meaning. Robert and younger brother David were being groomed by their
Father Leonard to take over the family farm. He taught them animal husbandry and butchering,
and when they weren't at school, they were expected to work. But Linda, the eldest of the
three Picton children, wasn't much of a fan of farm life and wanted to be as far away from it
as possible. She was always described as the smart one, according to Stevie Cameron's book
on the farm. When she was in grade 9, Linda decided to move in with relatives closer to Vancouver.
She was away from the farm and after that, she reportedly had as little to do with her family as possible.
Leonard and Louise purchased more land just a few kilometres away on Dominion Avenue and moved over there
with their sons. This is the property that would come to define the Picton family far more than
they could have ever imagined.
If Robert Picton were in school today, he might well have been diagnosed with a learning
disorder and offered support and treatment. People who knew him would say he was far more
intelligent than he was given credit for. But back in the 1960s, when he started high school,
he was labelled slow and placed in special education classes at school. This embarrassed him
and made him an easy target for bullies.
His severe lack of personal hygiene
combined with the ratty, stinky clothes he wore
did not help.
Robert dropped out of high school as soon as he could in grade 8.
Louise was not at all troubled by her son's decision.
She put him to work right away, full-time, on the farm.
She told him he needed to learn how to slaughter the pigs himself,
and at first he said he didn't want to, but he eventually relented and began learning the trade.
This was Robert's life. He'd never really known anything else but school and the farm.
In October of 1967, 14-year-old Timothy Barrett left home at about 8pm to walk to a friend's place.
It wasn't a long walk, just up the road and down Dominion Avenue, the same street as
the new Picton Farm. Timothy put on his jacket and told his parents he'd be home later.
He never returned home. After a few hours, his parents found out that Timothy never actually
arrived at the friend's home. They panicked and started checking in with neighbours to see if anyone
had seen him or knew where he might be. At about 1 a.m., Timothy's parents reported him missing to the
local RCMP, and the search continued throughout the night with no sign of him.
In the early daylight hours, Timothy's father was still on Dominion Avenue searching
alongside the road with a neighbour when he spotted a shoe on the side of the road.
It looked like Timothy's. About 10 feet away was a deep ditch running alongside the road.
He walked over and peered down, submersed. Submere,
emerged in several feet of water was his 14-year-old son.
Timothy Barrett was dead.
The RCMP quickly developed a theory that Timothy must have been walking along the road
when he was struck from behind by either a car or a truck and then hurled over into the ditch.
The car was probably speeding and Dominion Avenue was poorly lit.
The houses were sparse because it wasn't a developed area.
As the body was sent for autopsy, the RCMP received a phone call from a local mechanic
who said he'd seen the news reports of a hit and run and had something strange to report.
He said the son of one of his regular clients had shown up the night before wanting a fast repair
to an old red, beaten-up farm truck.
Specifically, he wanted the smashed front indicator light repaired,
along with a dent on the front fender, which he also wanted to be painted over.
The young man told him a log had fallen on the truck back at the farm,
but the mechanic looked at the dent and was suspicious.
Also, the entire truck was old and completely banged up.
Why the sudden request to repair this one area?
Hours later, that mechanic saw the news about Timothy Barrett and contacted the police,
giving them the name of the young man who requested the repairs,
David Picton.
That's Robert Pickton's younger brother.
At the time, David was 16 and had just earned his driver's license.
David Pickton was charged in juvenile court with failing to remain at the scene of an accident.
He would be placed on indefinite probation and his driver's license suspended for five years.
As far as the criminal justice system was concerned,
Timothy Barrett's death was the result of a careless accident.
Partial blame was assigned to Timothy himself
for walking on the side of the road where cars would be coming up behind him,
wearing dark clothing on a dimly lit night.
A coroner's inquiry concluded that David Picton was the one most at fault
for driving the truck that hit Timothy from behind
and for not stopping as Timothy was hurled into the water-filled ditch.
The autopsy confirmed Timothy suffered a fractured skull and a broken pelvis,
but those injuries would not have been fatal.
The actual cause of his death was drowning in the water.
But there was more to the story.
It began as whispers among neighbours,
but some 25 years later,
it was confirmed to journalist and author,
Stevie Cameron. Robert Picton himself would later tell a friend that he knew exactly what happened
that night. At the time, he was 17 years old, and he recalled David bursting into the farmhouse
saying he'd hit someone with his car and they were probably badly hurt. He pointed to the red truck.
Robert saw a new dent in the front right fender with marks and what looked to be blood.
Mother Louise sprang into action.
She ordered 16-year-old David to clean the blood off
and drive the truck straight to their mechanic for a rush repair job.
She told him to tell the mechanic that he'd hit a pole,
a story that would have been slightly more believable
than the one he actually told of a log falling on the truck.
Then Louise got into another vehicle to look for the person that David hit.
She later told her son Robert,
and at least one other person, that she was driving down the road and around the corner
when she spotted Timothy Barrett lying injured at the side of the road.
He was there because of her son's actions.
But instead of helping the 14-year-old,
she said she dragged him 10 feet over to the water-filled ditch and pushed him in.
Robert and David Picton were still teenagers themselves,
learning how the world worked.
Their mother had just shown them
that basic morality could be overridden
if self-preservation was at stake.
That responsibility for causing serious harm,
even death,
could be managed by cleaning evidence
and coordinating stories,
that human life was disposable.
It's telling that Robert Picton
later expressed a deep admiration
for his mother's strength
and discipline. There were never any consequences for Louise Pickton's alleged actions. By the time
this all came to light decades later, she would be dead. Father Leonard was in his late 70s by this point.
His health was deteriorating and he couldn't work the farm like he used to. Now it was up to his wife Louise,
their two sons and whoever else they could find to help.
On a regular basis, Louise sent Robert to the Woodlands School in New Westminster
for children with developmental disabilities, runaways and wards of the state.
The school allowed Robert to pick up children, drive them back to the farm
and use them as cheap or unpaid farm labour for the day
before returning them in the evening.
Years later, an investigation would expose rampant abuse of children at the Woodland School.
It shut down in the 90s.
But perhaps the big takeaway for Robert Picton was reinforcement of his mother's message
that some lives carried less value than others,
that vulnerable people could be exploited, harmed and discarded for personal gain
with little risk of consequence, simply because they existed.
on the margins and no one cared enough to intervene. By the early 1970s, the Picton brothers were in
their early 20s. David was the more outgoing one and was now dating regularly, but Robert did not
have much luck. He didn't smoke, drink or do drugs and didn't hang out at bars or nightclubs like
others his age. And even if his hygiene and appearance issues had been taken care of, which they weren't,
He was socially awkward.
He was never seen dating or with a girlfriend,
but instead had pen pals all over the country.
He was starting to feel a certain way about one of them.
Her name was Connie, and she lived in Pontiac, Michigan.
At 24 years old, Robert decided it was time to take his first ever vacation
so he could meet Connie in person.
He booked a bus ticket and told his mother he'd be gone for six weeks,
If Louise tried to stop him from leaving, it didn't work.
By this point, Robert had gained some confidence
and was able to talk back to her and assert himself when needed.
The bus ride would have been close to 40 hours one way,
and it took Robert across America, stopping in several cities along the way.
He would later tell a different female pen pal
that at some point he was stopped by a scout
and offered $40 an hour to be a male model, the equivalent of about $240 an hour in today's currency.
It seems a pretty unlikely story, but he claimed he wasn't interested and turned the opportunity down.
He eventually arrived in Pontiac, Michigan and met Connie.
He claimed they were engaged by the time he caught the bus back to British Columbia,
even calling her the love of his life.
But Connie did not want to move to Port Coquitlam, and Robert could not leave the pig farm.
That's as far as it went.
He threw himself back into the farm, while also dabbling in horses and truck driving to supplement his income.
Robert still did not date, but his siblings had each found partners and careers outside the farm.
Older sister Linda was married and lived in a well-to-do area in Vancouver.
She continued to avoid the farm and the family unless she was needed for business decisions.
Brother David lived on the farm with his girlfriend and their two young children.
While Louise had David's girlfriend working long hours on the farm, David was not interested.
He was into truck driving, construction and demolition, and other women besides his girlfriend.
They broke up and she moved out with their kids.
The next big family event was in 1977, when family patriarch Leonard was diagnosed with terminal cancer.
He died at age 82.
A little over a year later, Louise also passed away from cancer, age 67.
It was a shock for Robert to lose both parents so quickly, but perhaps the bigger shock was in his mother's will.
The Picton estate included the farm and several other parcels of land plus some cash.
Leonard's idea of dividing it among their children showed his preference.
All Linda would receive was a lump sum payment of $20,000
and everything else would be divided between the two sons.
But after Leonard passed away, Louise changed things around,
dividing the estate equally between the three children, but with a twist.
Linda and David were each given about $88,000 immediately,
but Louise's will stipulated her middle son Robert
would have to wait until he was 40 years old to receive his share.
For now, he was given an additional lump sum of $20,000.
The way Louise structured this suggests she did not trust Robert with that money now,
and he was devastated.
At the time, he was,
He was 30 years old.
It would be 10 more years until he turned 40.
And even though in the end he'd receive more money than either of his siblings,
he needed it now.
They earned their own money and didn't care for the farm.
It was up to him alone to keep it going,
which was not easy because a recent fire had destroyed one of their piggery barns,
along with 600 pigs.
The barn needed to be rebuilt.
He'd be trying to do it himself but would never finish.
He saw the whole thing as a betrayal by his mother.
Robert took his $20,000 and drowned his sorrows by purchasing a nearly new Ford truck.
He got into junking old cars, selling the usable parts,
separating the copper and selling it to scrapyards.
Whatever he couldn't get rid of remained on the farm.
Before long, there was a growing,
collection of old cars and machines, along with random scraps of wood and metal,
cropped up around the outskirts.
In the meantime, Robert's brother David had seen an untapped opportunity to profit from the
farm without actually having to do farming work.
The surrounding area of Port Coquitlam was rapidly being developed into housing and shops,
and there was strong demand for topsoil for landscape.
and one place that had plenty of topsoil was the farm.
David Pickton started a business ripping up the farm with a bulldozer,
collecting the topsoil and selling it to local developers.
What was once a series of green fields was torn up,
the farmland turned into dirt pits with trucks, bulldozers and other heavy equipment.
Fortunately, neither David nor Robert cared about aesthetics.
David had also started making friends with the Howells Angels.
It was now the early 80s and the first biker war was winding up.
The Howells Angels had established dominance over rival club The Outlaws
and were now focused on expanding across the country.
David Picton had already started making friends with the new Vancouver chapter.
He wasn't a biker himself, but he was keen to get in on whatever they were doing.
Before long, David roped Robert into letting the Hells Angels use the farm as a chop shop.
He'd already been junking old cars, some of them were stolen, and there was a lot more room on the farm,
so it was a natural fit. Besides, Robert was fascinated with outlaw biker culture.
He ended up running the chop shop completely, which included managing and arranging payment for a gang of teens he'd hired to steal.
cars. Robert also dabbled in cock fights and selling illegal cigarettes and alcohol. The Picton
brothers became known to local gangs and other crime syndicates in Port Coquitlam, and soon the police
were eyeing them up too. They came out to investigate rumours that the farm was being used as a
Hells Angels chop shop, but ultimately decided to focus on a more urgent priority, catching a psychopathic
serial killer who'd been preying on local children in the area. Clifford Olson was arrested in
1982 and would confess to murdering 11 children and sexually assaulting others. For a time,
he was known as Canada's most prolific serial killer. That is, until another took his place.
In the 1980s, indigenous women were showing up dead in Vancouver's downtown east side.
at an increasing rate.
Many were sex workers.
It was too easy for the police to dismiss each death as lifestyle-related.
This is one of the city's oldest neighborhoods, just east of the financial district,
and once described by the Vancouver Sun as four blocks from hell.
The downtown east side is a small area with a high concentration of poverty, homelessness, drug use,
mental illness, sex work and social exclusion.
But it wasn't always like that.
Indigenous communities were stewards of the land for thousands of years,
long before the Europeans arrived.
The colonizers had set their sights on Vancouver's deep natural harbour
as the perfect shipping hub for the British Empire.
The indigenous communities were forcibly displaced from the area.
By the early 1900s, the downtown east side was the bustling commercial and retail hut of Vancouver,
with City Hall, the city courthouse, libraries, banks and shops.
It was a hub for transportation and hospitality, with lots of hotels to serve transient workers.
But then came the Great Depression, causing a surge of unemployment and poverty worldwide in the 1930s.
Many people came to Vancouver looking for work, and many became stranded there without jobs.
Depression set in, and the downtown east side became increasingly defined by alcohol, brothels and general survival.
Then, the city started relocating key institutions and services.
First, City Hall was moved away.
Then, the main library, the streetcar route disappeared.
foot traffic followed. Local businesses started failing. Those hotels once built for workers
were converted into single-room occupancy housing for people with nowhere else to go.
Instead of investing in safety, housing and social supports, government and city officials looked
away. Once the bustling city centre, the downtown east side was now treated as a containment zone of
poverty, trauma and marginalisation.
Then came World Expo 86.
Expo 86 in Vancouver.
A spectacular national celebration unequalled since Expo 67 in Montreal.
An incredible vacation experience for the whole family.
Come on out.
Join the fun!
What a city!
Go Fip it!
Predicting an influx of tourists with their wallets open,
Landlords evicted more than a thousand low-income residents,
pushing many of them onto the streets or early death.
Housing became even more unaffordable,
and those decades of neglect had created conditions on the downtown east side
where predators could prey on the area's most vulnerable residents largely unchecked.
So in the 1980s, when indigenous women started showing up dead in the downtown east side,
The police were apathetic, just another naked body in a low-rent hotel room
with no visible injuries and dangerously high blood alcohol levels.
The police perceived it as the proverbial trash taking itself out.
What was really happening was darker than anyone could imagine.
A sadistic man was targeting vulnerable women he thought no one would miss.
He would pick up an indigenous woman at a bar
take her to a seedy hotel, pay her for sex and then pay or force her to drink lethal amounts of alcohol
until she died of alcohol poisoning.
And then he would slip away unnoticed.
In 1988, the police finally caught up with him.
Gilbert Paul Jordan was a local barber in his late 50s,
known to drink more than a bottle of vodka a day.
The so-called boozing barber would be.
only be convicted for the manslaughter of one woman, but he was linked to the deaths of another nine.
Gilbert Paul Jordan was not the only killer trolling the downtown East Side in the 80s.
More than a dozen more sex workers were murdered that decade.
Their bodies found dumped in back alleys, bushes, nearby industrial sites.
Several women had been mutilated with a knife.
Some had been viciously stabbed, strangled,
and beaten by a killer who was clearly out of control.
The police would describe it as overkill.
Most of these murders remained unsolved.
And among the rising number of murdered sex workers,
there were others who just disappeared one day, never to be seen again.
In 1987, the Vancouver Police Department finally set up a task force
to focus on solving these and other cases of missing and murdered women.
women from the Vancouver area.
After a little over a year, the task force disbanded.
They had helped solve two cases, but left the majority of them still unsolved.
The police had all but given up, and sex workers continued to be targeted.
Journalists Neil Hall and Kim Pemberton had been reporting on the issue for years for the
Vancouver Sun, gathering information to show these women were not just as.
another sex worker. They were loved and cherished by someone. A 1989 feature article included
profiles of 19 women who'd been murdered in the Vancouver area since 1982. Some had been sexually
assaulted, all unsolved at the time. The authors posed the question, is there a Ted Bundy or Green
River-style killer on the loose preying on women? A spokesperson from Vancouver,
Vancouver Police's major crimes unit was quoted, reiterating the task force's conclusion that there
was no evidence to suggest another serial killer was running a muck in the area.
This was seen by some as a baffling comment. The victims were all women, and most were sex workers
living on the margins of society. Many were indigenous and many struggled with hazardous substance
use. The more likely story was that these vulnerable women were thought of as expendable,
not worth the resources needed to investigate their cases properly.
Back in Port Coquitlam, Robert Picton had taken on the full weight of the farm operation
since his parents passed away in the late 70s, from managing the pigs and maintaining equipment
to slaughtering and butchering and servicing the client list. After all the parts of the animal,
that could be used for profit were removed, the carcass and other animal waste needed to be disposed of.
Sometimes he would bury it in pits on the farm. But as the 80s progressed, Robert started disposing
of the waste at a rendering plant in Vancouver called West Coast Reduction. This plant processed the
remains and retained the grease to reuse in products like soap, candles and plastics. Best practice for storing
biological waste is to keep it secure, cool and contained in sealed containers to prevent
leaks, odors, pests and contamination before it can be hygienically disposed of.
Robert Pickton didn't do that. He was foul, his truck was foul, and so were his open barrels
of rancid-smelling waste. But there were no issues. The rendering plant would allow small
operators to drive right in and dump their animal remains themselves. It was later established that
there was a complete lack of oversight at the plant that meant it was possible for unauthorized material
to be dumped straight into the massive slurry of decomposing remains and leftover restaurant kitchen
grease, never to be seen again. West Coast reduction happened to be right next to a certain
Vancouver neighborhood known as the downtown east side, and Robert Picton had heard all about it
from David and his Hells Angels friends. They spoke often about going to biker bars there and
taking their pick of the women on the streets engaged in survival sex work. Robert was still a
massive loner, and he was intrigued, so he started to develop a little routine. After driving into
Vancouver to dump his waste at West Coast Reduction, he would treat himself to a drive around
the downtown east side before returning to Port Coquitlam.
Women continued to go missing. Teressa Ann Williams grew up in Semia Moe First Nation
and gave birth to twin sons in 1988 when she was just 14 years old. She ran away soon after,
leaving her baby sons with her family. Just a few months.
After months after that, in early July of 1988, Teressa phoned home to say she was planning to
catch a bus home to see her sons. That was the last time her family ever heard from her.
She was just 15 years old when she disappeared.
About a month later, a local park groundskeeper made a horrific discovery.
He found a plastic bag that contained a decomposed section of human thigh and
bone. The park was Grandview Park, which happened to be right next door to West Coast
reduction. Years later, through DNA advances, those remains were confirmed to belong to Teresa
Anne Williams. The Vancouver Police Department would later state that while there was no
tangible evidence linking these and other disappearances to Robert Pickton, he cannot be ruled out.
The following year, 1989, 34-year-old Elaine Dumbar dropped off the face of the earth.
A white woman, originally from Regina Saskatchewan, Elaine was troubled and she began using drugs at around the age of 14.
She moved to British Columbia in the early 1980s and lived in Port Coquitlam with her common law partner and their new baby daughter.
Elaine's sister moved in with them and would report.
that Elaine was struggling with hazardous use of heroin.
The couple broke up and after returning to Saskatchewan for a few years with their daughter,
Elaine came back to live with her sister and Port Coquitlam once again.
But that stability did not last.
At some point, Elaine left and began spending time in Vancouver's downtown east side.
The sisters lost contact.
Elaine Dumbar was last seen in 1989 at a liquor store in North Vancouver.
She was 34 years old.
Her sister and father looked for her in the downtown East Side, but there was no trace.
That same year, 30-year-old Ingrid Sowett disappeared.
She was a white woman from Vancouver with a long history of mental health issues.
She'd been diagnosed with schizophrenia and was a non-year-old.
known drug user who had recently given birth and placed the baby for adoption. In 1989,
Ingrid was living in one of the seedy hotels on the downtown east side, that is, until she got
evicted. She visited her family and told them she was going to visit someone else. After months
without contact, her mother reported her missing in December of 1990. There have been no confirmed
sightings of Ingrid Sood since 1989.
The women of the downtown East Side were terrified.
They banded together to share information about bad experiences with clients
and warn each other of men to be wary of.
This was the start of what would be known as the bad trick list.
At this point, Robert Picton did not appear on the list.
The women passed these bad trick lists over to the police,
and started lobbying for more action.
When they suspected someone else had gone missing,
they checked in with the police,
they asked for more updates
and generally tried to keep the situation top of mind.
The Vancouver police decided to try again
and see what they could uncover with criminal profiling,
a new investigative technique at the time.
We'll be back in just a moment.
Criminal profiling is the process of examining crime scene evidence for patterns that might help predict an unknown offender's personality, behavioral and demographic characteristics, particularly in cases of serial offenses and the hope it will lead them to the offender.
Criminal profiling is widely used today and often assumed to be effective, but it should be noted
there is actually little scientific evidence to support its accuracy.
Research has found that much of its credibility is anecdotal, built on selective success stories
and vague predictions that only seem accurate in hindsight and all reinforced by pop culture
portrayals like Mind Hunter. Critics note that much of the most of the same.
like polygraph tests, profiling can mislead investigations when treated as reliable science
rather than a limited investigation tool. It can delay the identification of the real offender
and even contribute to wrongful convictions. It should be approached with caution.
In 1991, the Vancouver Police Department put together a team of criminal profilers
alongside existing homicide detectives and tasked them with analyzing 25 unsolved cases of women
murdered in and around the downtown east side. The team was called Project Eclipse and grew to
include several profilers from the FBI as well as a young Canadian from the Vancouver Police Department
named Kim Rosmo. He had eight years experience in the downtown east side and was described as a brilliant
analytical thinker, skilled at math and working with computers. Rosmo was developing a new practice
known as geographic profiling, which involved analyzing the crime locations and connecting them in an
attempt to learn more about a predator. His theory was that serial killers worked in areas they were
familiar with and felt comfortable in. Project Eclipse gathered for a week-long conference to analyze the
known data and information.
Reportedly, the first time a group of international profilers had brainstormed together
to try and advance an investigation.
The team sorted the murdered women into different groups and found that with a cluster
of four linked murders, there was at least one serial killer at work, with a possible
two others out there as well.
They presented their findings to the Vancouver Police Department who owned the
jurisdiction, hoping that there would be action taken based on it. It fell flat. Kim Rosmo would
later say he believed this response stemmed from laziness and lack of resources and time,
but he also suspected the department had no idea what to do with this information. It was unprecedented
research and required out-of-the-box thinking. It appears the police effectively put it in the too hard basket
and went back to business as usual, as women continued to be targeted.
Back on the Picton farm, Robert and David continued their association with the Howells Angels,
and the disheveled property became a central meeting place.
There were parties, barbecues, lots of drinking, and lots of women.
But Robert remained an outsider.
By this point, the brothers were in their early 40s,
and while David had had a lot of different girlfriends, Robert never dated anyone.
He didn't even interact much with their biker friends.
He was often seen tending to the barbecue and the pig roasts.
That seemed to be where he was comfortable.
He'd become friendly with a Filipino immigrant named Pat Casanova,
who helped him butcher pigs on the farm and had a very good recipe for barbecued pork.
Together, they started a profitable side business.
The local RCMP continued to keep an eye on the Picton brothers,
as rumours persisted about a Howells Angels chop shop on the farm.
David Picton drew additional attention of his own.
He was a bad driver who had racked up a lot of traffic incidents,
including several crashes where he was at fault and sued for damages.
He was also known to cruise the.
the downtown east side to bring women back to the farm. Many people would later say that while
David Picton acted like, well, a dickhead, underneath it all, he was quite intelligent.
He ran several successful businesses by this point and would often bid on large demolition jobs
in Vancouver and surrounding areas. He frequently won those contracts. In August of 1991, a young woman
named Nancy Clark disappeared, but she was far from Vancouver's downtown east side.
She went missing from Vancouver Island, the city of Victoria.
25-year-old Nancy was a caring and sensible woman, as described by those who knew her,
and a devoted mother to two daughters aged 8 and almost 1.
She was also an outside sex worker, providing for her children by soliciting clients from
street corner in Victoria.
One night she never returned home from work and her mother was immediately concerned.
That day, it was Nancy's eldest daughter's birthday and she was always there for her children
no matter what.
She would never have missed their birthday.
Her mother reported her missing.
At the time, Nancy Clark's disappearance from Vancouver Island was determined to be likely not
related to the growing list of women going missing on the mainland. But what law enforcement
didn't know at the time was that David Picton was working a demolition job on the island and that
his brother Robert had gone with him to help. They were both on Vancouver Island at the very
same time that Nancy Clark went missing in 1991. And more than 10 years later, Nancy's DNA would be found
on their farm on the mainland.
Of the 33 women to be forensically linked to the Picton farm,
Nancy Clark was the earliest to disappear.
But this number is only a reflection of what could still be found by that point.
The following year, David Picton found himself on the police's radar yet again.
A female employee at one of his excavation sites reported,
to police that she encountered David inside an on-site trailer. He pushed her up against a wall
and groped her genitals over her jeans, but another employee entered the trailer and interrupted him.
According to the woman, as David Picton left the trailer, he threatened to rape and kill her.
Quote, he said, I'm going to wape you. He couldn't say the word with an R. He said it twice. He was
laughing like crazy. David claimed he only slapped the woman on the butt and denied threatening her.
He was charged with sexual assault. The woman would report that after that, another employee
warned her to leave town, saying, they're going to kill you, they're going to cut you up and
spread you all over where you won't be found. Terrified, she left town. David Pickton was found
guilty of sexual assault, but the jury noted it was moderate. He got away with a year probation
and a fine of $1,000. That was 1992. The poor woman lived in fear for many years. She would later
be awarded $45,000 in damages after suing David Pickton for inflicting psychological trauma.
Back at the farm, Roberts trips to the downtown East Side.
were becoming second nature, and he looked for more opportunities to visit.
When his brother got a demolition contract in North Vancouver, he saw his chance.
He would be driving near the downtown east side on the way,
and with just a slight detour, he could buy himself the company of a sex worker or two.
But after a while, Robert got tired of the daily commute.
He had an old motorhome parked on the farm,
so he gave it a tune-up and drove it to the demolition site.
He lived there for the duration of the job,
saying he was acting as a site security officer out of hours.
Now, living much closer to the downtown east side,
Robert began spending more time there.
He frequented local bars, places where many of the area's most vulnerable residents gathered.
He settled into a routine.
He didn't do alcohol.
or drugs, so only drank soda himself.
But when he found a sex worker he was interested in,
he would give her money to buy drugs for herself as an incentive.
Then he would persuade her to go with him back to his farm to keep partying.
The situation on the ground in the downtown east side was becoming a crisis.
Sex workers were organising to try and keep themselves safe.
They gathered at the women's information,
safe house, also known as Wish, a non-profit organization that operated a drop-in center on the
downtown east side right in the middle of the main strip, where sex workers could get a hot meal,
a space to rest and get ready, and access nursing and counseling services.
While at Wish, these women traded stories about their clients and updated their list of
johns or tricks who had given them the creeps or shown violent or perverse tendencies.
They passed their bad trick list to the police, with descriptions of the men and in many cases
license plate numbers. It's at this time that the name Willie Picton started appearing on this
bad trick list. The police promised to review the information, but women continue to go missing
or turn up murdered in some alleyway.
Kathleen Whatley was known as a vivacious black woman, petite in stature.
She'd lived in the United States for some years before she moved to Vancouver,
and she'd lived a difficult life.
About five years earlier, she survived an attempted murder
during a shooting stemming from cocaine use.
She gave birth to two young children with a common law partner in Vancouver,
but the couple had recently separated and Kathleen was relying on sex work to help make ends meet.
In June of 1992, 39-year-old Kathleen Watley left her two young children with a babysitter
and went to meet a client on the downtown east side.
She was never seen again.
Then there was Elsie Sebastian Jones, a member of the Pachydat First Nation on the west coast of Vancouver.
Island. Elsie was among the 150,000 Indigenous children sent to a residential school.
Often underfunded and overcrowded, the residential schools program was government-sponsored and run
by religious organizations with the goal to eradicate indigenous culture and replace it with
the Western culture of European settlers. Thousands of students were subjected to physical
and sexual abuse and experimentation, and thousands died right on their school grounds,
according to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
The residential school system is often associated with Canada's early history,
but these schools actually ran for more than a century until the last one closed in 1996.
Elsie Sebastian Jones suffered repeated physical abuse during her years at residential
school, leaving lasting emotional scars that shaped most of her adult life. She gave birth to the
first of four children when she was just 16. She also struggled with depression, substance use disorder,
unstable relationships and many periods of instability in her life. After attending several treatment
programs, followed by relapse, her children eventually went to live with relatives and Elsie moved to
Vancouver. Her daughters would say she always kept in touch with them, later describing their
mother as a smart, beautiful woman who endured racism throughout her life and fell through the cracks
of a system that failed to support her. One night in 1992, Elsie cooked dinner for her daughters
then left to get drugs. She was never seen again. She was 40 years old. The following
year, Teresa Louise Triff vanished. Very little is known about Teresa, other than the fact that she was a 31-year-old
white woman with blonde curly hair and blue eyes. All in all, 15 women had vanished from the
downtown east side in the 14 years between 1979 and 1993. By this point, the Picton brothers were not
getting along at all. Their living arrangements had always been tumultuous, with both Robert and David
living in the rambling farmhouse, sharing the one bathroom. In many respects, they were different.
David was the short and stocky brother thought of as a foul-mouthed jerk who liked having lots of people
over to party, whereas Robert was lanky and slim, not very social, and he often creeped people out.
They both had bad tempers and bad hygiene, although Roberts was said to be much worse.
Overall, it was not working in the farmhouse.
There was no privacy and no escape from each other.
After a massive blow-up, Robert decided to move into the old motorhome on the other side of the property,
and David stayed in the farmhouse.
Despite the filthy conditions, they always seemed to have women around that needed housing,
and were willing to do domestic work like laundry and cleaning if they could stay on the farm.
A woman named Tanya would later testify that she needed a place to stay
and knew the Pictons because her stepfather worked on the farm, slaughtering pigs.
Robert ushered her into his motor home and allowed her to stay there with him.
Tanya described their relationship as like uncle and niece.
They slept in separate areas in the motor home,
and there was no sex.
She liked and trusted Robert so much
that she ended up staying there for a year and a half.
Tanya said there was a constant stream of people coming and going from the farm,
and she often returned to the motor home very late at night
to find that Robert wasn't there.
She would testify she just assumed he was working late.
She had no idea that he was meeting sex workers on the downtown east side.
The list of missing women continued to grow.
Lee Minor grew up near San Francisco, one of four children.
Her family would describe her as charismatic and fiercely loyal
with striking Auburn hair and a magnetic personality.
As a teenager, Lee's life was upended when her father died suddenly of a heart attack,
and years later, her own husband would die by suicide in her arm.
The compounded grief left her devastated and she began using heroin to cope.
Lee became a mother in 1986 and moved to Edmonton for a fresh start.
She tried to stop using drugs but it proved difficult and her child eventually went to live with
family. In 1993, she moved to the downtown east side and engaged in sex work to survive
and fund her substance use disorder.
That December of 1993,
34-year-old Lee phoned her sister
to ask for money to visit their mother for Christmas.
Her family waited for her all day,
gifts unopened, but she never arrived.
At first, they assumed she just hadn't kept her promise.
But when weeks went by with no word,
Lee's mother went looking for her on the downtown,
County East Side and reported her missing. She would later say the police showed little interest.
Then there's Angela Arsano, who was just 17 years old when she disappeared.
Angela grew up with her mother and stepfather, moving several times before eventually
settling in the Vancouver area. Angela reportedly started using drugs in high school and
dropped out in grade 9. Her mother would later tell the Surrey
leader that she left home and briefly became involved in sex work on the downtown east side,
but her boyfriend helped her get off the streets.
Angela was street smart and capable of looking after herself,
but she was also being harassed by a pimp who wanted her to return to sex work.
In August of 1994, Angela spoke with her mother on the phone,
making plans to go shopping for shower curtains.
She was living with her boyfriend by this time, and that night they met downtown for dinner and shopping with another friend.
She caught the bus home by herself for some reason.
When her boyfriend arrived home later, Angela's purse, ID, cash and shopping bags were there,
but the 17-year-old was missing.
She was never seen again.
During this time, Robert Picton had continued his trips into West Coast.
reduction to dump his barrels of waste and remains. Sometimes he wasn't able to make the trip
himself, and West Coast would send a truck out to pick them up. He didn't really need an excuse
to go to the downtown east side anymore, so this arrangement became more and more frequent.
One driver would later testify that he made regular trips out to the Picton farm for four
years in the early to mid-90s. He remembered glancing into the barrels periodically and was often
surprised to see chunks of meat in it, some of them quite big chunks. This struck him as unusual. Most
farmers and butchers carved off every piece of meat they could find. That's where the money was.
But Robert Picton was just throwing it away. Thanks for listening. In part two, there's an alarm
climbing spike and vulnerable women going missing from the downtown east side.
Two would live to tell their stories.
We'll circle back to Wendy, who escaped from the farm after a vicious knife fight with Robert
Picton and was rushed to emergency surgery still with the handcuffs he put around her wrist.
Meanwhile, the Picton brothers become officially wealthy and opened the infamous party venue
known as Piggy's Palace, serving alcohol and barbecue pork to bikers, sex workers and even local
city officials.
The next episode will be available in a week.
You can listen ad-free and early on our premium feeds.
For the full list of resources, sources, research studies and anything else you want to know about the podcast,
see the show notes or visit canadian truecrime.ca.a.
We donate monthly to those.
facing injustice. Proceeds from this series are going to the Wish Dropin Center Society,
supporting street-based sex workers on Vancouver's downtown east side since 1984.
Special thanks to Danielle Paradie for Family Outreach and Additional Research.
Audio editing was by Crosby Audio and Eric Crosby voiced the disclaimer.
Our senior producer is Lindsay Eldridge and Carol Weinberg is our script consultant.
Research, writing, narration and sound design was by me
and the theme songs were composed by We Talk of Dreams.
I'll be back soon with another Canadian true crime episode.
See you then.
