Canadian True Crime - The Death of Laura Letts [1]
Episode Date: November 15, 2020A two-part series —After a painful breakup, Laura Letts decided to take leave from her job and travel abroad. While on tour in New Zealand, she would meet someone new, and her life would forever be ...changed.Look out for early, ad-free release on CTC premium feeds: available on Amazon Music (included with Prime), Apple Podcasts, Patreon and Supercast. Full list of resources, information sources, credits and music credits:See the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi friends, I hope you're doing well. Just a few things before I begin.
This case is a two-parter. If you're a supporter on Patreon or Supercast, the ad-free version of
Part 2 is waiting for you right now. For everyone else, Part 2 will be available in just two days.
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or for any financial support that you might give, it all helps, and I appreciate you guys so much.
I also wanted to thank everyone who sent in great feedback on the last episode on the Saskatoon
freezing deaths. I do have something that I have to correct about that episode. It's to do with the
phrase, you're not dead until you're warm and dead. In the episode, I said that this phrase
referred to the paradoxical undressing in the end stages of hypothermia, when some people suddenly
get incredibly hot and want to rip their clothes off.
But I have found out some interesting information.
This is not where the phrase originates.
Its purpose is actually to remind medical professionals treating someone with hypothermia
that the condition can slow down bodily functions like a pulse and breathing so much
that it looks like the person has passed away, when in actual fact they might still be able
to be revived.
So no matter what, the body must be rewarmed and rewerect.
resuscitation continued, and it's only when they've been warmed up to a certain temperature
that they can be pronounced dead. I wanted to thank all of the medical professionals who wrote
in to educate me about this topic. You really do learn something every day. And with that,
it's on with the show. Canadian True Crime is a completely independent production. The podcast
contains coarse language, adult themes, and content of a violent and disturbing nature. Listener
discretion is advised.
The year was 1995, and Laura Letts had just gone through a painful breakup.
The 35-year-old was quiet and reflective, a deep thinker.
She needed a break to heal and get herself back together.
So, she applied for a year's leave from her elementary school teaching job in rural Alberta
and decided to spend it travelling.
Laura packed her bags and left for a new adventure, which would end with tours in Australia and New Zealand.
Once she got to New Zealand's North Island, she purchased a ticket for a popular tourist attraction
that offered guided four-wheel drive adventure tours from the city of Napier to a location called Cape Kidnappers on the east coast.
The picturesque tour informed tourists about the area's history and offered breathtaking
views of both the landscape and the wildlife that inhabits it.
On the tour, Laura finished eating a banana and didn't know where to dispose of the peel.
According to Kamloops this week, she located the operator of the tour, a man named Peter Beckett,
and asked him where the garbage was.
At first, he didn't know what she meant, because in New Zealand and Australia, it's called
rubbish, not garbage.
But they soon figured things out.
The two got talking.
It was easy conversation and they clicked immediately.
Laura asked Peter what power tastes like.
Power is the Maori word for what North Americans know as abalone.
He told her that he actually had some at home to cook
and suggested she'd come to his house for dinner.
And she did.
That night, Peter Beckett and Laura Lett.
enjoyed wine and conversation as he cooked power fritters on the barbecue.
The two talked until the small hours of the evening, learning all about each other.
Peter told Laura that he was married with four kids, but he and his wife had recently separated,
and he was currently focusing on his business during the tourist season.
Peter was gregarious, extroverted and friendly, which provided the perfect balance point for
Laura, who was quieter, thoughtful and introspective.
They had an amazing night and didn't want to part ways just yet.
Laura's plan was to continue travelling down to the South Island of New Zealand.
Peter had an idea.
He would take 10 days off from work and join her.
Laura was thrilled.
For almost two weeks, the pair were joined at the hip.
Peter would later describe it to Camloops this week
as an amazing love story, but it wasn't a love at first sight thing, it was more a meeting
of the minds. Quote, I hate to use cliches, but it was soulmate stuff. I'd been married before,
I'd had breakups before, I'd fallen in love before, but this was different. But reality awaited.
At the end of the trip, Laura had to return to her life in Canada. So the two said their goodbyes and
continued on with their lives. Laura went back to school teaching and Peter ended up reconciling
with his wife before separating again for good a few years later. Five years after Peter and Laura
first met, they got back in touch. Peter wanted to see her again. That Christmas, he flew to
Edmonton, Alberta from New Zealand. His plan was to visit with her where she lived in the small
rural Albertan town of Westlock, which is about 85 kilometres north of Edmonton.
The pair had a great time, but the visit was again too short.
This time, they didn't want to leave things the same way.
They agreed to start a long-distance relationship.
A few more years went by with a few long-distance trips between Canada and New Zealand.
Peter and Laura started talking about being together in person.
But Peter was serving a term as a city councillor in the city of Napier.
He decided that when his term was up in 2002, he was going to start his new life in Canada.
And he did.
The year after Peter arrived, the pair got married.
Over the next seven years, Laura and Peter acquired a large motorhome, or RV,
which they loved to take on getaways to provincial parks on the weekends.
and on holidays.
One place they regularly went to was Upper Arrow Lake
in the Rocky Mountains of British Columbia.
They loved to stay in a place there called Shelter Bay.
In fact, Peter and Laura were such regulars there
that the manager knew them well
and referred to them as the unofficial hosts of the park.
The campsites at Shelter Bay have sweeping views of the lake
and surrounding mountains,
and it's a popular destination for activities like fishing and boating.
Laura was known to be terrified of water and couldn't swim,
but they loved to go boating around the bay.
It was August 18, 2010, a beautiful and hot summer's evening.
A man named John was staying at the Shelter Bay campsite with his wife,
and they were fishing in the bay from their pontoon boat.
All of a sudden they felt a jolt.
They'd been rammed lightly from behind by a small zodiac inflatable dingy.
In it was a man who looked to be in his mid-50s,
frantically moving his arms in the air,
yelling that his wife was in trouble.
It was Peter Beckett.
He pointed to a small rocky shoreline close by,
indicating that's where his wife was.
John drove his pontoon boat over,
to see if he could help.
When he got there, he saw a woman half submerged in the water.
It was 50-year-old Laura Let's Beckett.
When he got to her, he could see right away from the color of her face that she was, quote,
very much dead at that point.
John watched as Peter started to give Laura mouth-to-mouth resuscitation,
but John knew it would be futile,
so he suggested that they take her back to the campsite to get re-referenced.
medical assistance. Once they arrived back, an off-duty paramedic named Darrell happened to be
close by and saw Peter sitting at the back of John's pontoon boat looking at his wife's body,
upset that he hadn't been able to resuscitate her. Daryl ran over and quickly confirmed that
Laura Letts Beckett had passed away. Daryl followed BC Ambulance Service Protocol as a precaution
and treated the area as a potential crime scene,
making sure that nobody touched the body until the authorities arrived.
But everyone wanted to know what had happened.
How did Laura die?
I'm Christy, an Australian who's called Canada home for more than a decade,
and this is my passion project.
Join me to hear about some of the most thought-provoking
and often heartbreaking true crime cases in Canada.
Using court documents and news archives, I take you through each story from beginning to end
with a look at the way the media covered the crime and the impact it had on the community.
This is Canadian True Crime.
Peter Beckett gave his statement to the RCMP.
He said that he was at the stern of the inflatable zodiac where the motor is
and had set up two fishing rods.
Laura was at the bow sitting on a corner.
cooler holding an umbrella to shade her from the sun. Peter confirmed that she couldn't swim and
added that while she did have a life jacket on when they first went out in the boat, it was a very
hot day and she complained, so he suggested that she'd take it off. They then moved the zodiac
close to a secluded rocky shoreline to take advantage of the shade there. Peter said Laura
remarked that her back was sore. And then, he said he heard a splash and when he turned around,
Laura and the umbrella had gone over the side of the boat. He said he heard his wife screaming
and thrashing about, struggling to stay afloat, while starting to move under the boat. When asked
what he did in response, his answer surprised the RCMP. Instead of jumping in after his wife,
He said he first grabbed one of his fishing rods and started winding it in.
He gave the excuse that it was a stupid fisherman's instinct.
Quote, she was moving out the back of the boat quick and, you know, stupid,
I was thinking if I could get the rod in, I could get around to her.
So I was winding the rod in and she was getting behind me.
According to Peter, as he was reeling the line in,
the boat drifted away from Laura and she went under the water
even more. He grabbed the second rod and said he either threw it in the water or let it go and spun
the boat around. Laura was now completely submerged. Peter said that he turned off the boat and went over to the
side to rescue her and while he could see her under the water, he wasn't able to swim down to reach her
despite trying about ten times. Peter was a very large man, standing at six foot eight,
and over 400 pounds or 180 kilos.
He said that his body was too buoyant to go down that far into the water.
So he went to shore, grabbed a rock to weigh him down some more and then swam back out with it.
But he couldn't find her.
He kept looking around in the water and then he saw some bubbles.
So he said he used the rock to get far enough underwater to grab Laura by the hand
and pull her to the surface.
Quote,
As I was swimming to shore,
I was blowing air into her lungs,
into her mouth,
trying to do CPR.
He said he continued
once he was on shore,
but her only response was gurgling.
Peter said he didn't know
whether to continue or go and get help.
He didn't want to leave Laura by herself.
He said the Zodiac was drifting away,
so he swam back out to get it.
He tried to try to,
to lift his wife on board, but he wasn't able to. It was then that he spied the pontoon boat
in the distance and decided to drive the Zodiac there to ask for help. From there, Laura was taken
back to the campsite and confirmed deceased by the paramedic. Peter's version of events was the only
version of events. It was a secluded bay with no one around and the only potential witness was now
dead. An autopsy confirmed that Laura's cause of death was drowning and the death was ruled an accident.
She was cremated in British Columbia and Peter brought her ashes back to Alberta with him.
Laura's loved ones gathered for a memorial service and celebration of her life. Because she was a lot of
long-time elementary school teacher, many students, former students and parents knew her and loved her.
She was celebrated for being a master teacher. People flooded her online obituary with comments and memories.
One friend said Laura was a great inspiration to everyone who knew her and cared deeply about her students.
Quote, she had a positive effect on everyone she worked with and had contact with. We were better people.
for having known her and observed her words and deeds. But even though Laura's death had been
ruled an accident, it didn't take long for her family and friends to start asking questions.
Just a week after the tragedy, Laura's cousin and close friend emailed the police saying that she
had some information. As it turned out, there was another side to the story that the police
needed to know. And to do that, we have to go back to when Laura and Peter first met in New Zealand.
As you'll remember, it was 1995. He'd recently separated from his wife and was focusing on his
tourism business, and Laura had purchased a ticket on his tour. They spent two weeks together
touring the South Island of New Zealand before she returned to Canada. After that, it would be another
five years before they saw each other again.
As you'll remember, during those years between visits, Peter reconciled with his wife Wendy,
also the mother of his four children. You'll also remember that he was serving a three-year
term as councilman for Napier City. According to New Zealand news media website stuff.co.n.
a former councillor recalled that Peter just appeared out of nowhere.
He wasn't asked to run and he didn't know anyone who worked on council.
There were four positions available so Peter was in with a good chance of winning,
even though no one really knew him.
But that said, Peter had a personality that was described as odd.
For starters, he was super competitive.
According to the New Zealand her,
he went straight on the offensive, running a negative campaign,
distributing bizarre, insulting caricatures of his opponents,
and threatening to expose corruption in local government.
He was successful in securing one of the spots, but only just.
He was the lowest polling of all four candidates who got a spot.
During his one and only term as councilman,
some knew him as personable, but he ruffled many.
feathers. He was known to be charismatic but with a dominating personality. He would frequently
unleash his explosive sudden temper, alienating other councilmen and the staff. The then-mare
of Napier, Alan Dick, would say that Peter called him repeatedly in the early morning hours
and would often scream insults at him. While Peter promised to expose corruption in local government,
he wasn't able to follow through,
so instead he made something up,
leveling some very serious allegations
against the CEO of council.
These allegations were later revealed
to be totally unfounded.
As well as being described as erratic,
self-serving and obnoxious,
he was also described as a dreadful counsellor.
Barbara Arnott,
who was a fellow counsellor at the time
and went on to become the mayor of Napier, told stuff.co.n.z, that Peter was a stirer and saw
conspiracies everywhere. He, quote, added nothing to counsel. His behavior was inappropriate. He had an
arrogance about him that flowed over into his social life and nobody ever knew what he was doing.
Peter was known to show up late for important council events and when he left, he'd often take a
couple of bottles of liquor with him on the council's dime. At one of these get-togethers,
someone publicly confronted Peter about this and he gave a tearful excuse about problems in his
personal life. The problems were not specified, but alcoholism was implied. So people on
council knew that Peter Beckett had issues with drinking and managing his anger, but he had
run-ins in the community as well.
Duff.co.n.z reported that once he was drinking at a bar and had a disagreement with a local rugby team who was there.
The situation devolved to where Peter verbally abused several players and then yelled at the team's captain,
Don't you know who I am? Before allegedly slapping him.
The captain complained to counsel and suggested that Peter resigned.
Peter refuted what he said, but also blamed the outburst on liquor.
A witness would say that Peter would use his imposing stature to demand respect.
Menacing was a word used to describe him.
It was while he was serving this term as councilman,
that Peter and his wife decided they wanted different things from life,
and they separated again, this time for the last time.
Peter turned his attention back to Laura Letts in Canada, and they rekindled their relationship.
He would tell everyone he was moving to Canada to be with Laura,
but people who knew him in New Zealand wondered if he was really escaping his disastrous term as councilman,
which ended just as suddenly as it began and left his reputation in Tatters.
The council wasn't the only thing Peter left behind when he moved to Canada.
His ex-wife Wendy would tell Stuff.co.NZ that after he stepped on that plane, he did not keep in contact with the four children they shared, who ranged in age from around 11 to early 20s.
Peter's only possessions when he arrived in Canada were whatever was in the two suitcases he brought with him as well as $50,000 in cash.
Everything else he sold.
It appeared that he planned to never return to New Zealand.
Laura was excited to introduce her long-distance partner to her friends.
By all accounts, they appeared to be a very nice couple that got on well.
Friends heard them calling each other baby and other affectionate names
and Peter was known to bring Laura's lunch to work for her every day.
A year after Peter arrived in Canada, he and Laura got,
married. But there was a problem. Laura came from a conservative religious family. Her parents
belonged to an evangelical movement known as Plymouth Brethren or Exclusive Brethren. The group
generally frowns upon the concept of divorce and remarriage. Because Peter had been married before,
Laura was worried about possible repercussions from her strict parents and maybe even the church.
Even though she was a grown adult in her early 40s,
they both decided to keep the fact that it was Peter's second marriage a secret, for now.
Laura had her job as a second grade teacher,
but Peter had to find a way to make money in his new homeland.
Although he continued to dabble in various business ventures,
there weren't many employment opportunities in rural Alberta
for a former specialist adventure tour operator from New Zealand,
He found work as a substitute school bus driver and sporadically as a truck driver on a local farm.
Laura's friends noted some changes started to happen in her life after Peter arrived.
She had been known as sensible, a frugal second-hand store shopper who owned not much more than a serviceable SUV and a half-duplex home.
But Peter was quite the opposite.
He was talkative and flashy.
After he came to Canada, Laura's friends noticed that the couple started buying up large in a way that Laura would never have done.
Over the next few years, they bought three cars, a Ford Explorer, a Jaguar, and a BMW, all only a few years old when they were purchased.
They also bought a 20-foot Yamaha powerboat, as well as that 42-foot motor home.
Laura's family and friends noted that the relationship was great at the start.
But some, including her mother, Beth, observed that over time Peter started to become overbearing and domineering.
Peter did not get along well with Laura's conservative religious parents.
He would refer to their religion as a brainwashing cult and constantly badmouthed them to Laura.
She was put in the middle and was starting to tire of it.
Four years into their marriage, Laura began seeing a psychologist.
Dr. Michelle Vandergreen would notice that Laura wrote in her patient intake form
that she was, quote, very unhappy in her marriage.
Laura was anxious and depressed.
In their sessions, Laura described incidents of verbal, emotional, and physical abuse.
at the hands of her husband.
She and the psychologist talked about ways of ensuring her safety.
A few months into therapy, an incident happened.
There's no information publicly available about it,
but whatever happened led Laura to file a complaint against Peter for physical abuse.
Her mother Beth accompanied her to lodge the complaint with the Westlock RCMP.
Laura was extremely upset and crying.
According to Beth, the officer kept saying to Laura that it wasn't her fault
and suggested that she leave the marriage because they, quote,
did not want to be dealing with the homicide later.
Laura decided not to press charges,
but she did initiate a separation and then filed for divorce.
During this time, Laura came clean to her parents about the fact
that Peter had been married before.
They reacted badly as she feared they would.
Peter was already on the outer with her parents,
but now they were firm in the belief that he was completely unsuitable for their daughter.
Laura also caught up with a friend and colleague named Kim,
who would recall that they had an emotional conversation.
After Kim shared some of her own struggles,
Laura started crying and trembled as she,
She shared that Peter was controlling, and she felt like she was a shell of who she used to be because he always pushed her down.
She felt like he was a powerful person up on a pedestal, and she was just small.
Laura told her friend that she would never get back together with Peter.
The separation only lasted three months.
Peter convinced Laura to give it another go and work things out, and they reconciled.
at the beginning of 2008.
Laura's parents were not happy with this development
and cut her out of their life.
For the next three years,
Laura and her parents were estranged,
which devastated her.
She had to accept that Peter would continue
to badmouth them whenever he wanted.
And even worse,
he told a lot of people in town about the situation.
Peter was an open book kind of guy,
but Laura was the opposite.
She liked her private life to be kept private,
ended upset her when he talked to people
about what was going on between her and her parents,
but he continued to do it.
During this time,
Laura continued to see her psychologist, Dr. Vandergreen,
who observed that she remained anxious and depressed
just as she had before the separation.
But now, the focus of her angst had shifted
from her unhappy marriage with Peter Beckett
to her strained relationship with her parents.
Laura and the psychologist met for the last time
on June 29, 2010, just seven weeks before she died.
According to the doctor, Laura did not raise any alarm during this meeting.
They discussed Laura's upcoming 50th birthday and her plans,
and they also talked about her growing need to reunite with her parents.
A week after Laura's death, the police received that email from her cousin and close friend, Virginia.
The police heard that in 2007, in the lead up to Peter and Laura's separation,
Virginia was in Calgary with the couple when they became involved in an intense argument.
After the argument was over, Laura came to Virginia, shaking.
and asked her for help.
Quote,
Don't leave me here, I'm scared.
Camloops this week reported that Laura then told Virginia a chilling story.
Laura said that on a previous boating trip she took with Peter,
he told her, quote,
This is how you're going to die, you're going to drown.
According to Laura, Peter added that she wouldn't know when or where it was going to happen,
but now she knew how it was going to happen.
Because this came from a third person, Virginia, this was hearsay and likely not admissible evidence.
But it was enough to give the RCMP a reason to doubt Peter's story that Laura's death was an accident.
They opened an investigation.
The RCMP asked Peter to show them exactly what happened when Laura died,
a re-enactment. So he went out in a boat with three investigators,
located the spot where he said Laura had drowned and described what happened.
The entire session was videoed and Camloops this week later obtained the video from the RCMP.
The following clips have been edited slightly for clarity and to remove long gaps in silence.
Peter was asked about the use of life jackets.
As you remember, in his initial police statement, he said that Laura had been wearing it in the boat, but she got hot and took it off.
They asked him if he normally wore a life jacket.
No.
Were you on that day?
No.
What about Laura?
Laura had one on initially when she came from the motor home to the boat.
She never normally wore a life jacket on, but we always had one in the boat for both of us.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
But we never wore them.
When she walked down from the motorhome to the boat wrap,
she'd just put the life jacket around here like,
I've got this one around me now, for ease of carrying it.
And as soon as we got out on the water,
she'd taken it off and put it on top of her cooler.
And then she had another mattress, not mattress,
a cushion that she bought.
and she's sitting on that because she had a sore butt.
So no, she never had a life jacket on.
And, you know, everyone that knows Laura well used to say to her,
you should be wearing a life jacket.
You should be wearing a life jacket.
He told the story about what happened
as he instructed the investigators where to position the boat.
I heard Laura say first, I've got a saw back.
She was holding the beach umbrella
when she said
she'd got a saw back she'd stood up in the boat
which was a no-no if you were brought up
with my father, right?
And then the next thing
we were about right here
is like here the splash.
My lure was like 10 feet
from the boat so I wound
that in and just put the rod down
and immediately grabbed my other rod
thinking I'd hooked up
which is a fisherman's
instinct, right?
And the beach umbrella came down between us and the boat and I start winding and after a couple of seconds.
I say, Laura, Laura, where are you? What's happening?
I hear nothing.
I don't hear Peter, I don't hear screaming, I hear nothing.
And I just then hit the panic button and threw out the flip in the umbrella, which is
should be about somewhere around here.
I, the other rod that I'd started to wind in,
I threw that out that side.
As I turned the boat around,
so there should be the rod there with a,
the second one was only probably a quarter wound in.
The first rod was round right in.
All I wanted to do was clear the boat.
I threw the,
the beach umbrella kicked that overboard and I'm looking for Laura and it's like she's
flipping it's like hiding those seats like she's gone and it was about at this point here
maybe a little bit over here I turned the boat around and I saw her in the water
flailing she was she was she was head up
And you know what I mean with flayed?
And I just flicked off my glasses and went over the side together.
Stupid in hindsight, I should have just dived.
It's like I float to here in the water, eh?
And if I just dived, I probably would have had enough inertia to actually pluck her the
first time.
And then I'm diving and diving and diving.
and she's getting further and further away from me and I'm getting more and more tired.
So I'm not sure whether I pushed the boat into shore as I swam in surf life-saving stroke
and I picked a rock from the shore here and I came out and that gave me enough negative buoyancy
to get down to her.
And then as soon as I got Laura to the surface, I tried to get ear into her.
And that wasn't working.
So I swam in with her, the boat was out here, and I worked on the beach with her.
And that's the first thing that gives me my post-traumatic stress disorder, seeing her flailing in the water.
The second one is, and I've been trained in first aid, is just absolutely given her lungs, the biggest blow that you can imagine.
Once I got into shore, you know, you should roll them on their side and you should do this and make sure the passages is clear and all this and textbook stuff.
But you're holding the one you love, your soul, mate, your best friend, right?
And the water that just came out of her nose at me was just, that's that's that second thing that I see.
You know, when you wake up in bed in the morning and we ain't got that touch anymore.
And that's the second vision that I have to move on from.
So it was about directly there, about behind that log that I worked on here.
Don't ask me time.
I know I held her and I was a mess and I was balling and I'm running out and my bad
shoulders not much good for the old chest pumping and then I look up in the
flipping sodiacs out here because I know I went through the dilemma of do I keep
on working on lawyer which I was getting absolutely no response from or do I go and
get the boat so that I can load Laura onto the boat and get some help with here.
And that was a hard dilemma, a hard decision to make, right?
So I get the boat, it might have been about here, right, where I had to swim to get the
boat because the time it spent working on Laura, the boat had drifted offshore because it
was a westerly breeze.
Once he'd retrieved the boat, Peter talked about how he tried to lift Laura into it but couldn't.
So that's when he decided to go to the pontoon boat and ask for help, and the rest is history.
The RCMP asked Peter to go over some details again, and he explained more about this
fisherman's instinct that caused him to focus on winding in his rod rather than helping his wife.
And that's just a fisherman's instinct. I know it sounds stupid, but when you're near a splash and you're a
fishermen and you're tuned into fishing, you think we might have got a big one's hit.
You know what I mean?
So what did you think when you heard the splash then?
I don't, I really don't know.
Maybe she jumped over.
Maybe we were closer to the shore than I had imagined because I'm preoccupied with, with,
looking backwards and I'm winding in rods at the same time and I never thought
that she'd fallen over that was what it initially come come into my head okay
right and then when I when the gravity of the situation that law is gone
hits you it was like where is she and we have to fight it you we have to find it you you have
together. He was asked to explain more about that splash that he heard when she went overboard.
Everything about the splash, how do you mean?
Describe what you heard in that when you say you're referring.
It sounded like somebody jumping into the water. That's, I mean, that's what it sounded like.
It sounded like if you jumped over now, it sounded like that.
The conversation turned to the rock that Peter picked up to weigh himself down.
He described how he found it.
And then tell me about what you did after that.
I found a rock and I knew just things come to you at the time, right?
It's like just because for a car accident, I knew that I only had one chance to get the rock right.
And this rock just appeared to me, like it was being given to me, right?
From a, like a spiritual thing.
This rock just appeared to me, and I picked it up, and I didn't even think about the
flipping weight of it.
I don't mean any offense.
No, of course.
But it wasn't the weight.
It was the size and it was.
like given to me, like, that's the rock you need.
You know what I'm saying?
That's the rock you need.
Tucked it under my arm and back out.
He was asked more about that rock,
so he described the size and shape of it
and drew a picture of it
before going on to talk about how much it would weigh
in relation to his own buoyancy.
How much do you think that would weigh?
Ten pounds?
Okay.
I don't know, I was just that.
I was having about 10 pounds.
Okay.
I know that when I scuba dived years and years ago in New Zealand, with my suit on, I had
to wear 34 pounds of lead because my own boyish is incredible.
So is that just to count, is that just to put you to...
I'm a very positively buoyant person.
What would it take to get you to neutral then?
Well, obviously about 10 or 15 pounds.
But it used to take me 34 pounds of lead around my stomach to get me to neutrally
buoyed with a wetsuit on, which are particularly buoyed.
Okay.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
But if I, if I dived just in togs, swim shorts, probably 10 to 15.
I'll float even in freshwater at about breast height.
So I can sit in the water.
I don't even have to be flat.
I can stand in the water off the bottom
and I float to this line here.
I'm incredibly, incredibly bright.
Once he used the rock to weigh himself down
so he could swim down to get Laura and bring her to shore,
he became emotional.
as he described giving her CPR
and elaborated more about
why he felt he didn't do a very good job.
I put ear into her like you wouldn't believe.
Like her chest was raising
seemed like three, four inches.
But as I was doing that,
I hadn't blocked off her nose.
Okay.
And the amount of the,
the amount of water that,
came out of her nose, it was unbelievable.
That's the thing that really gets me is when you,
I mean, she wasn't just a person.
She wasn't just a person that I've come across
that I would have done the same thing for anyway.
That was my wife, why, there?
You know what I'm saying?
So I guess there's a natural reluctance for you to,
be hard because in hindsight you're supposed to do chest pumps to break
capillage and ribs. Are you married? You would find that, I'll tell you from
personal experience, you would find that incredibly difficult to do to your own wife.
You'd be able to do that to a stranger perhaps and with my arm limitation I couldn't have done it
Anyway. The video showed Peter's odd quirks, like repeatedly calling the detective driving the boat
Skipper. He was extremely verbose, telling the investigators about trout and their feeding habits
and the differences between various types of rocks. All things the investigators didn't need to know.
As well as interviewing Peter and Laura's close friends and family members, the RCMP also issued a statement to the
media asking anyone else who had information about the couple to come forward. And they did.
Laura lived next to a retired police officer named John, both before and after Peter's arrival
to Canada. Over time, John had become good friends with the couple and socialized with them
frequently. He told investigators the story that Peter told him about what happened to Laura,
but it was a slightly different story from the one he told the RCMP.
As you'll remember, Peter told police he heard a splash and then Laura screamed while flailing in the water.
But when he told the story to his neighbour John, Peter said he didn't even notice that Laura had fallen off the boat.
He said he happened to look back and saw that she just wasn't there, no splash and no scream.
Now, the RCMP thought this was fishy.
Peter was a portly man standing at six foot eight.
If he was down one end of a small inflatable boat,
one would think that the sudden lack of weight on the other end
would be immediately noticeable.
The RCMP also spoke with a couple named Mary and Ron,
who were friends with Laura and Peter,
and were actually at Shelter Bay the night that Laura died.
The two couples had planned to meet up after the ill-fated boat ride.
That night, as Ron and Mary were walking over to Laura and Peter's motorhome to meet them,
they heard Peter shouting for Ron from the beach.
Their first thought was that he must have caught a big fish.
Instead, Mary and Ron saw Peter standing in the pontoon boat with Laura lying on the floor of the boat.
Peter told them that Laura had.
drowned in the water. Mary told the RCMP that she knew that Laura couldn't swim. In fact,
Laura had told her that she was terrified of the water and always wore her life jacket. But she
wasn't wearing one then. As you'll remember, in Peter's initial statement to police, he said that
Laura had a life jacket on and took it off when she got hot. But in another statement, he said that
she never wore a life jacket and only had it draped over her shoulders for ease of carrying.
Mary told the investigators that Peter gave her the first story,
that Laura had been feeling hot and took the life jacket off.
Peter spent the next few days in British Columbia,
staying at Mary and Ron's place, recuperating after the accident,
and receiving care and sympathy.
Ron, who described himself as curious, asked Peter a bunch of
questions about the circumstances of Laura's death. He eventually noticed that Peter was becoming
annoyed, so they changed the subject. Later in the conversation, they somehow got to talking about
Google Earth, a topic which caught Peter's full attention. He asked what you're able to see on it.
Ron said, I'll show you and took Peter to his computer. After looking at one example location,
Peter asked if they could pull up Shelter Bay,
and they zooned in on the area near the rocky shoreline where Laura died.
Peter said,
Oh, you can't see that much.
Ron told the RCMP that Peter then asked him if Google Earth showed live video or old images.
Ron told him that, as far as he knew,
it wasn't like a webcam that was continuously recording.
Peter said,
Oh, that's okay then.
And that's where we'll leave it for part one of this story.
The ad-free version of Part 2 is available now for supporters on Patreon and Supercast.
And it'll be available to everyone in just two days.
So be sure to check back.
To learn more about becoming a supporter, visit canadian truecrime.ca.caircline.caircone
Donates regularly to Canadian charitable organisations that help victims and survivors of injustice.
This month we have donated to Alberta Council of Women's Shelters,
a network organisation of women's shelters in Alberta that aim to end violence against women
by providing safety, supporting families and improving communities.
For more information, see acws.ca.ca.ca.
Today's podcast recommendation is The Miami Chronicles,
a captivating new investigative true crime podcast from my friends at the Apostrophe Podcast Network.
Season 1, Booby Trap, is about the 1979 murder of a 14-year-old boy in the suburbs of North Miami Beach,
and the story is told by one of the victim's friends.
Take a listen.
This is a story about a model.
boy scout. He won all the medals. And a cool scout master. Being cool is code for
getting high. And then there was a gunshot. And everything changed. A solid friendship.
They were pals. Chuck said numerous times that Richie was like a son to him.
Until betrayal led to violence. I pray to God that that's not Richie. A bizarre mechanism causes a
tragic death. So this was a booby trap and it was lethal. Please join us for season one of the
Miami Chronicles Booby Trap. Subscribe now wherever you get your podcast. Canadian True Crime is a completely
independent production funded through advertising and the generosity of supporters. Thank you to everyone
who listens, who rates and reviews the podcast and who supports us on Patreon and Supercast. To learn more
about these episodes and for full credits and resources, see the page for this episode at
Canadian Truecrime.ca slash episodes. While you're there, you can submit case suggestions,
follow the show on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, and learn more about how to get early
ad-free episodes and bonus content via the exclusive feed for supporters.
Thanks to the host of True for voicing the disclaimer and also to We Talk of Dreams who can post
the theme song. I'll be back soon with another Canadian true crime story. See you then.
