Crime Junkie - SERIAL KILLER: Bruce McArthur
Episode Date: June 28, 2021For years, the LGBTQ community in Toronto, Canada worried there was a serial killer targeting men in the city’s Church and Wellesley neighborhood. Police disagreed and downplayed their concerns -- a...nd all the while, more men vanished into thin air. But the truth, when it was finally revealed, showed just how complicated a relationship still exists between Toronto Police and the LGBTQ community. For current Fan Club membership options and policies, please visit https://crimejunkieapp.com/library/. Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/serial-killer-bruce-mcarthur/Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Crime Junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers.
And I'm Brett.
And the story I have for you today is an important story to close out this year's Pride Month.
It's sometimes easy to see, like, the glitzy side of Pride, this, like, fun party with
celebratory parades. But at its core, Pride was and is a protest. I mean, it began as
a protest. A protest against police after they raided New York's Stonewall Inn back
in 1969. That particular police raid was hardly the first of its kind, more like the straw
that broke the camel's back.
The complicated and often confrontational relationship between police and the LGBTQ community goes
much further back than Stonewall. And it's easy to forget that it wasn't that many years
ago here in America that being gay was illegal. Dressing in drag was illegal. And police were
out there enforcing those laws. Laws that today seem ridiculous. For the most part,
at least in North America, police aren't out there with a mandate to enforce morality
laws, the ones that govern who we can and can't sleep with or love and what we can and
can't wear. But that doesn't mean everything is fine and dandy between the queer community
and the police.
As straight cisgendered people, I think it's easy to look around at all the things like
marriage equality and think that the fight for queer liberation is largely over. But
the truth is a lot more complicated than that. And today's story, which unfolded within
the last decade in the city of Toronto, shows us just how far we still have to go. This
is the story of Bruce McArthur and the men of the gay village.
It's late June 2017, just after Pride weekend in Toronto, Canada, when friends of Andrew
Kinsman start to worry about him. A close friend of Andrew's named Robin, who lives
in the same building, first got concerned on Monday the 26th, when Andrew said that
he was going to meet some friends for coffee, but didn't come back. But listen, Andrew
is 49 years old, he knows how to take care of himself, so Robin just kind of parks her
concern for the moment and goes about her business trying not to overreact. But then
by Wednesday, when she still hasn't seen him, that's when she starts to worry. So
Robin gets in touch with another friend of Andrew's, this guy named Tom, and they decide
to let themselves into Andrew's apartment and see if there's anything in there that
might help them understand where he went. They let themselves into his place, expecting
who knows what, but there isn't a single thing out of place. The only thing missing
is this satchel type bag that Andrew carried with him everywhere he went, and of course
Andrew himself is not there. But what's really concerning to Robin and Tom is that Andrew's
cat is there, but the cat is there without food or water. Robin told Salma Ibrahim for
CBC News that Andrew loved that cat more than anything and would never, under any circumstances,
leave him without food or water. So that's when Andrew's friends report him missing
to the Toronto police that very day, and immediately they start pulling together a search for Andrew.
You mean the police started searching right away or the friends? No, no, no, the friends.
And Andrew had a lot of them. According to Justin Ling's book, Missing from the Village,
Andrew had a huge network of people in the church and Wellesley part of Toronto, the
area known as the Gay Village. And they immediately got to work trying to find him, just combing
the streets and the alleyways, putting up posters on literally every light pole. I mean,
you couldn't walk one block in the neighborhood without seeing Andrew's face on a poster.
His friends aren't shy about calling the media either to drum up more awareness and
put Andrew's face in front of even more people. And they call police too. One friend after
another over and over. That pressure is at least part of the reason police start looking
into Andrew's disappearance pretty quickly. They check hospitals and shelters and morgues.
They look into his finances, request his phone and banking records, and they reach out to
dozens of people who knew him and who had seen him trying to get a handle on who he is, his
patterns of behavior, any cause for concern. But they don't find anything that might help
explain his disappearance. No crushing debt, no family or community issues. And sure, he
had his struggles with depression who hasn't, but he wasn't in that headspace recently.
See, to me, the lack of red flags feels like, you know, a red flag in and of itself. But
I mean, my question is, did his phone records or bank records show that he was active anywhere?
No, there had been no activity in his bank accounts. And he had access to his email or
even his social media, and he hadn't used his phone either. It's literally like he
walked out of the door of his building that day and disappeared into thin air. And I mean,
to your point, it is troubling. Yeah, what's even more troubling for his friends and for
everyone in the village is that Andrew is not the first man to vanish from Toronto's
gay village. Just a couple of months before in mid April, another man, 44 year old Salim
Essin, had vanished without a trace. Now Andrew and Salim were both gay men who frequented
the village, but the similarities pretty much stopped there. I mean, Salim was unemployed
and known to use drugs. And even though his friends said he had just found his own place
and was working toward recovery, he was more or less considered transient at the time.
According to a documentary called Catching a Serial Killer, Bruce MacArthur, Salim had
no fixed address when he went missing. He just kind of carted around all his things
from couch to couch in a silver wheelie suitcase. And because the suitcase was gone too, it
wasn't a huge stretch to think that he left town or was just kind of laying low. Right.
And at this point, is anyone saying that the disappearances are connected? Well, police
aren't, but people in the village, they had been connecting these cases from day one.
But here's the thing, they're not just connecting them to one another, but to a string of men
vanishing from the village without a trace that goes all the way back to 2010. So let
me take you back there and tell you those stories so you can see why everyone is so concerned
now. The first was a 43 year old man named Scanda Navaratnam, who went missing in September
2010. A few months after that, at the end of December, a second man, 44 year old Abdul
Basir Faisi, who went by Basir, also vanished. Two years after that, in October 2012, a
third man fell off the grid, 58 year old Majid Khayhan, who was known as Hamid. The similarities
between these three men were impossible to ignore. They're all Middle Eastern or South
Asian. They're all roughly the same age, same build. They kind of had the same whole
look, like literally down to the same facial hair. And did police investigate these other
disappearances at all? Well, they did. They investigated them as individual missing persons
cases, but not as three potentially connected cases, or at least not right away. But when
Hamid vanished from the village, this was their third brown skinned man in two years.
It was hard for anyone not to wonder if there was something more going on here. I mean,
people in the village started to whisper that maybe there was a serial killer preying on
gay men. Then again, if you look, you could see patterns like this everywhere in Toronto.
Joseph Jafari wrote about this in a piece for Rolling Stone, saying as an example that
women of color had been going missing in Toronto for years, and no one jumped to say that they
were connected or that there was a serial killer involved. Yeah, and police did end
up at least considering that the three cases were connected. That was part of their work
back in November 2012 when they created a specialized task force called Project Houston.
Because in Houston, we have a problem. Oh, it actually started as an investigation into
just one of the cases when Toronto police got a tip through Interpol suggesting that
Sconda Navaratnam, who had been missing more than two years at this point, wasn't missing
at all, but had been murdered. And at the center of that allegation is this guy named
James Brunton. This dude is like in his mid sixties, coaching minor hockey, he's married,
but known to spend time in the village. Police went hard at James during Project Houston,
trying to figure out if and how he was connected to Sconda. And at the same time, they figured
they look at the other active missing persons files, which is what finally brought the Seer
and Hamid's cases to Project Houston. Once they had all three files in front of them,
researchers saw the similarities men in the village had been seeing all along. That's
when they started appearing in the village with posters of the missing men asking for
leads and information. And of course, people in the village are like, finally, finally
police are taking our concerns seriously. But even though they're paying attention
now and looking into the disappearances, police don't end up finding evidence to suggest
that this James guy killed Sconda, let alone the other two men. Which is not to say James
came out of Project Houston squeaky clean. He ended up facing charges for creating, possessing
and distributing child sex abuse material. And he pled guilty to some of those charges.
But in terms of the missing men, James Brunton was a dead end. So was Project Houston all
about this James or did they look for any other suspects? It was mostly about James,
but they kept Project Houston going as an investigation into the missing men even after
he was ruled out. I mean, police did tons of interviews with people in the village at
the time and they even brought in a few for questioning his witnesses. But no matter what
they did, they like weren't getting any traction. And by the time Project Houston winds down
in April 2014, all police had was a pile of dead ends. And you can imagine the community
is like, hang on a second, like, you're just giving up? Like that's it?
Yeah, like there are still three missing men. Like let's keep going till we find something.
Yeah, but the problem is they aren't getting anything to go on. And police say that they
don't even have proof that a crime has happened at all. I mean, there are no crime scenes,
there are no bodies, no witnesses saying that they saw anything out of the ordinary. And so
the investigators on Project Houston move on to other files. And really people in the village
started to move on to the community level panic that was there when Project Houston began,
that had really settled down, which is not to say that anyone forgot about the missing men.
That's not what I mean. It's just that whatever seemed to be going on in the village didn't seem
like it was going on anymore. That is, until Andrew Kinsman went missing, and suddenly
everyone's paying attention again. In the summer of 2017, the community holds an
open town hall where hundreds of people from the village get together. And those whispers
in the area about a serial killer praying on gay men, those aren't so much whispers anymore.
This is really interesting because the first four missing men all fit the same profile,
but Andrew Kinsman doesn't. Like, does that ever make people wonder whether his case is even connected?
Well, yeah, but he's still a gay man missing from this relatively small, tight-knit community. So
the people who live there see the similarities between them in a way that police can't, or maybe
we wouldn't, or maybe the way the police don't want to see. There's actually a paragraph from
Justin Lings' vice article that quotes a Toronto police statement from around this time. I think
it's helpful. So here, let me have you read it. It says, quote, there has been some suggestion
within the church and Wellesley community that the disappearances of Andrew Kinsman and Salim
Essen are linked as well as with the three other men reported missing from the same area from 2010
to 2012, a police statement reads, detailed investigation and evidence obtained thus far
in the course of both investigations has not confirmed a link, although as part of the police
investigation, this is being considered, end quote. So they make this statement, but then
something shifts for police. And in the summer of 2017, they set up a second task force dedicated
to the missing person's cases from the village. This one they call Project Prism. Project Prism is
really just about the 2017 cases, Salim and Andrew. And to me, based on the statement you read,
I think they're mostly treating them as isolated incidents. Salim had been reported missing several
weeks after he was last seen. So long enough for potentially hot leads to cool off. So it's tough
going for investigators on that case. But because Andrew had been reported missing pretty quickly,
by the time this project prism kicks off, they're already chasing one potential lead in Andrew's
disappearance. So remember how Andrew's friend Robin said that the last time she saw him,
he was on his way to meet a friend for coffee. Yeah, but do we ever find out who?
I'm not even sure Robin knew at the time, but when police searched Andrew's apartment after
he was first reported missing, one of the things that they found was like a handheld,
like old timey calendar, like something you'd see on the wall. And it's where Andrew tracked
pretty much everything. And there were two things written in that little box for June 26th,
a reminder to pay his phone bill and a name, Bruce. Now that's not a name police know,
but they think it's important because next to the name, it said two slash three. And police
know that that's right around the time Andrew was last seen and potentially maybe going to get
coffee. So while they figure out how to track this guy down with just a first name, they also
start looking for security footage from the area where Andrew lived. And they find one camera in
particular that shows the street corner in front of Andrew's building. And what they're looking for
is video from the time frame when they think Andrew left his place that day. And I'm actually
going to send you a link to this video, it's published on CBC's website. So give me just a
second and you'll just want to watch like the first eight seconds for right now.
Okay, so it's not like fully trained on his front door. It's kind of like capturing all this from
across the street. And it's, of course, not the greatest quality. But it does show a red van
driving up the street. And it stops for like a second or two, and then pulls away. And it's all
happening like at the very, very top of the frame. And you can't even see everything all the time.
Yeah, so what police are thinking is that somebody maybe got into the van during that little stop
that the van makes, but they don't know for sure. I mean, like you said, it's like way at the top,
this whole scene is barely visible. It's happening just at the edge of like the camera's range.
But they were able to find a second security camera, one with a better view. So go ahead and
press play on that video again, Brett. Okay, so now the vantage point is farther away,
but you can see like the whole red van now, where before you could kind of only see its wheels or
like the bottom of the frame. And 100% there is a man who comes out of the building, you set his
Andrews and hops into the passenger side. Yep. Now, the picture isn't clear enough to show us
who got into the van or even who's driving the van. And police can't even make out a license plate
either. But they can tell that the van is an older model Dodge Caravan. So according to the
documentary, police take stills from the video to a local Dodge dealership. And from there,
they're able to narrow it down even further. Basically, they narrow down this van to a 2004
Dodge Caravan 20th anniversary edition. So then they request a list of every 2003 to 2005 Dodge
Caravan registered in the province of Ontario. And when the list comes back, it has more than
6100 names on it. Oh, but that's not even daunting because they don't need to go through 6100 names.
They just need to find all the bruises. Exactly. And that brings their list of more than 6000
Dodge Caravan owners down to just five. And only one of those five drove a 20th anniversary
edition. And that man was Bruce MacArthur. When police look into Bruce, they find a 66 year old
business owner who is a father and a grandfather. He'd been married for many years, but he and
his wife divorced in the late 1990s, at which point Bruce packed up his things from the family home
and got himself an apartment in the city. He owned a landscaping business and had this big
roster of clients all over Toronto. And he'd even worked as a mall Santa before. And listen,
the dude had totally had the look. He's like this big guy with snow white hair, kind of this
easy smile and even a twinkle in his eye. But this Santa was no saint because just a year before this
in 2016, Bruce had been arrested for assault after it was reported that Bruce had choked and almost
killed a man in the back of his van. But before anyone could even start investigating that,
Bruce walked himself into the police station and sort of turned himself in.
Okay, what do you mean by sort of turned himself in?
Well, it wasn't like he just like walked in and said, here I am, like I'm guilty.
What he said was, I'm here to make a statement about an incident that happened between me and
my partner. So two officers sat down with Bruce and he told them that what the victim had said
was true, like he had choked this guy in his van while they were being intimate, but that his
partner wanted to be choked, or at least he thought his partner wanted to be choked. And
basically he was telling the police like this whole thing was a complete misunderstanding.
And as Justin Ling put it, a bunch of like mixed messages and crossed wires, like, you know,
there's no crime here. This is just like a big play. He said a big misunderstanding.
Ultimately police didn't have enough to charge him with anything. So they let him go.
And based on what I've read and watched about this case, the victim who has never been named
was married at the time of this encounter. And his wife knew nothing about the fact that he was
having sex with Bruce. So maybe not super motivated to push for charges since it would require
outing himself in the process. Right. But even without any formal charges,
the arrest was recorded in the Toronto Police's database, along with another one.
There was an assault conviction from 2001 when Bruce beat a man with a metal pipe inside the
man's home. Now he pled guilty in that case, but instead of jail time, based on a psychological
assessment that he was a low risk to reoffend, he got a conditional sentence, which included a ban
on spending any time period in the gay village. With all of this pointing in one direction,
the detective who identified the driver of the van, he calls his boss and tells him,
I think I might have a person of interest in the kinsman disappearance. It's this guy, Bruce McArthur.
And the boss who'd been on the team for Project Houston several years before his ears perk up right
away because he knows that name. And the reason why he knows that name changes everything about the
investigation. He knows the name Bruce McArthur because it had come up before. They had actually
talked to him before questioned him before. Wait, what? Yeah, even though they didn't identify any
suspects back then, they questioned a lot of people during the course of that operation.
And one of those people was Bruce McArthur. And the reason that he was on their radar during
Project Houston was because they found connections between him and two of the missing men. You see,
police had found an email address during the search of Scanda's computer, silverfox51athotmail.com.
That same email address was also written on a notepad at the Sears place. And when police
tracked the IP address associated with Silver Fox 51 at hotmail.com, it led them to Bruce McArthur.
According to Nicole Brockbank's reporting for the CBC, police asked Bruce to come in for questioning
as just a witness. That was November 11th of 2013. He told them that he knew Scanda. They'd
never had a sexual relationship or anything, but they both used to hang out at this bar in the
village called the Black Eagle. But he said he had no idea why his email was on a notepad at
the Sears place. He said he didn't know the Sears at all, period. I mean, I get that it's not proof
that they knew each other, but I mean, because it's really just proof that the Sears wrote down that
email address. But also, how would he have gotten it other than from Bruce himself?
Well, at that point, police were thinking this year maybe saw Bruce's profile on this dating
site they were both on, and actually that Scanda was on too. So they were thinking he just jotted
down the email address thinking, oh, like, I'll reach out another time. I'm not entirely sure
anyone knows the answer to that question, but that's kind of what I'm assuming, I guess.
So what about the third missing person from Project Houston,
Hamid? Like, did the police find any connection between him and Bruce during that first task
force investigation? Not then, no, but they didn't have to, because while they were interviewing
Bruce back in 2013 for Project Houston, he just straight up told them there was a connection.
Bruce said that he didn't just know Hamid, they'd actually had a sexual relationship at one time,
and Hamid even worked for Bruce in his landscaping business for a little while.
So they could connect him to all three men right then and there?
Surely alarm bells would have been ringing everywhere, right?
See, that's the thing. I don't think they were. Like I said, the village has always been this
pretty tight-knit community. People know one another, know of one another at least. So the
fact that he admitted to dating one guy, knowing another from around, and then possibly a third
guy was on the same dating site, like, to them that isn't the kind of red flag that it might be
to you or I or again to the people in the community. I mean, Bruce wasn't even the only
person that they could connect, however loosely, to more than one of the missing men during the
Project Houston investigation. But even beyond all of that, like, Bruce is just not the kind of person
that sets off those alarm bells easily for anyone, not even police. In the documentary,
they say that at the time police considered Bruce affable, credible, believable. I mean,
he was showing up freely. He didn't hesitate at all. He was open about what he knew and seemed
like he really wanted to help. Because, I mean, this was his community too, after all, and Bruce
was pretty newly out at this point, and the village was just as much his safe space as anyone else's,
or at least they believed. But now it's 2017. It's a new investigation with new leads and new
evidence, and all of it is pointing to Bruce. Bruce and his red van. Except they're looking
everywhere for this van, and it's gone. And it turns out it's gone because he sold it. They
didn't know to whom or where, but they figure he probably sold it for parts. So they start calling
auto body shops and wrecking lots to see if anyone bought a red Dodge Caravan lately.
It takes weeks, but finally in early October, they hit the jackpot at an auto parts shop
almost an hour outside Toronto. The owner tells the officers he indeed bought a red Dodge Caravan
not too long ago, and lucky for police, they still had it on site. When the officers get there,
the van's tires are off and the license plate has been removed, but it's otherwise in one piece.
According to a post media article written by Adrian Humphries, police right away noticed,
quote, a dried liquid covering the inside of the tailgate from one side to the other,
covered in small flies, end quote. So they haul the van back to Toronto to their forensics lab
to be processed for evidence. And we know that doesn't happen overnight. But when they do finally
get the results back on November 8th, what they find is that the inside did test positive for
Andrew Kinsman's blood. Now it's not a ton of blood, mind you, not enough to prove Andrew was
killed there or anything like that, but it's enough to move Bruce from a person of interest to a
suspect, and enough for police to start some pretty heavy surveillance on him to track his
movements and his online activity 24 seven. I'm sorry, how was Andrew's blood on the inside of
the van? Not enough for an arrest? Well, here's the thing, right? Like, so they probably could
get an arrest, but they don't think that they have enough to actually make a case against him
for murder. And that's what they're aiming for. Like, when they get this guy, they want to lock
him up for good. So they decided their next move has to be a search of Bruce's apartment,
the one that he shares with a roommate. But they don't want him to know about the search.
So they try and wait until both Bruce and his roommate are gone. So are they looking for something
like especially specific or more of like, they'll know it when they see it kind of situation.
According to Nicole Brockbank, CBC article, they're looking for anything that belongs to Andrew
Kinsman or any physical evidence that could link the two of them. And they want to clone Bruce's
computer like his hard drives, all of that kind of stuff. So it is kind of specific. So once they
get in there, one of the officers gets to work cloning Bruce's computer while another starts
the physical search, checking closets, opening drawers, cupboards, checking under the bed, whatever.
And they do find a few things of interest. There is an orange stain on Bruce's pillow that they
swabbed for DNA, a nine inch metal bar wrapped in tape, a pile of post-its with usernames and
passwords for like a whole bunch of websites. And while they're collecting all of this,
they're less than an hour into their operation when their surveillance team calls to tell them
that Bruce, who mind you, his movements, they have been memorizing for weeks. I mean,
they had his patterns down to a science they never changed at all. But now all of a sudden,
he's on his way home and he's going to be in the apartment in 10 minutes. No, yes. So they've got
10 minutes, 10 minutes to photograph or swab or copy whatever else they need to. And they have to
erase any evidence that they've been there in the first place. The problem is that what they
really need is that download of his computer and it's not done yet. It's not even close. And they
know with every second that ticks by, they get another potential piece of evidence off that
computer. But at the same time, Bruce gets closer and closer. With only moments to spare,
they shut down the search and hustle out the door just in the nick of time.
Ultimately, they were able to get about 50% of the data off Bruce's computer and officers
start sifting through it right away. According to the catching a serial killer documentary,
Bruce had tons of pictures of men on his computer, nothing incriminating, just tons and tons of
pictures. One by one, they would click open a file, a face flashes up and stares out at them,
and then they would close it and move on. Click, open, close. Next file, click, open, close.
Finally, a familiar face pops up. Andrew Kinsman. And then they click and there's another file
and another man and another face. Same thing. Click, open, close. Then Scanda, never wrapped
up. And then another click and another face. Basir Faisi. A few more clicks and there's
Hamid Qayhan. The next day, Toronto Police hold their annual year-end press conference.
They have a lot to answer for as 2017 comes to a close. Questions about Project Prism and about
all the men missing from the village. Questions about Elora Wells, which is actually a story we
just told in the fan club as a mini episode, whose body was found in June, but remained
unidentified for five months. And there were also questions about someone named Tess Richie,
who'd been missing for four days when her body was found at the bottom of a stairwell in the
gay village. And her body was found two doors down from where she was last seen. And she wasn't found
by the police assigned to her case, but by her own mother. Oh my God. I mean, I don't know the crime
rate in Toronto overall, let alone like the village more specifically. But that does seem like a lot
of things for this small community in just a matter of months. For sure. And on the Project
Prism side specifically, the community wanted to know where police are in their investigation.
Like they wanted answers and they wanted to know if they should be worried about a serial killer.
Amber, I'm gonna let you read this paragraph from Justin Lin's book quoting Toronto Police that day.
Okay, so this is written more like a series of statements on the same topic rather than like a
whole like standalone condensed statement. So just keep that in mind as I read it.
The officer is saying quote, there is no evidence at this point in time, which in any way establishes
that the disappearances of Salim Eson and Andrew Kinsman are linked to the disappearance of the
males from the Project Houston investigation. There is no evidence to support that the
disappearance of Salim Eson or Andrew Kinsman are linked. There is no evidence of foul play.
There is no evidence that a serial killer is responsible for the disappearance of any of
the missing males end quote. But wait, hold up. This is after the van thing like after the blood
after this super covert operation search of Bruce's apartment and pictures of all the
missing men were found on his computer. Yep. But the community didn't know about any of that stuff.
So police are saying all of this knowing that no one hearing it would really be able to prove
otherwise. As December came to a close, police are still sifting through what they were able
to copy from Bruce's computer. I mean, they're spending hours and hours each day for weeks and
weeks at a time. And then in mid January 2018, having exhausted what's actually stored on the
computer, they start searching for what isn't on the computer, files that had been deleted or moved,
files that would turn out to break this case wide open.
While they're searching the deleted files from Bruce's computer, they find more pictures.
And while they're searching those, they land on another familiar face, not Scanda or Besir
or Hamid or Andrew or any of the men that they'd seen in those photos before. This one is of Salim
Essen, who by this time had been missing for nearly eight months. And this photo isn't like the ones
that they found before. In this picture, Salim is lying on Bruce's bed dead. In the same deleted
folder were more photos. One of Andrew Kinsman photographed dead laying in the back of Bruce's
red dodge caravan. And there were others other dead men men police didn't even recognize at all.
Just then is when police get a call from their surveillance team saying Bruce just got back
to his apartment and he's not alone. He is with a man who fits the profile of the men they now
believe Bruce killed in that very apartment. Oh my God, there's no time to meticulously plan
an arrest. This is urgent. This just became life or death. Teams of officers jump into cars
speeding from all directions, running red lights trying to get to Bruce's apartment before
something awful happens. They arrive at his apartment building just after 10 in the morning
and they painstakingly make their way up to the 19th floor ready to bust down the door.
But they decide to just knock first instead. I'm sorry that is such a Canadian way to arrest a serial
killer. Right? Now they hear footsteps on the other side but the lock turns, the door swings
open and standing right there in front of them is Bruce MacArthur. Officers force their way inside
the apartment and rush to the bedroom where they find that man that he was seen going to his apartment
with. Bound to the bed, his mouth taped shut and he is terrified but he is still alive.
By the time they free the man from the handcuffs, Bruce himself was in cuffs,
now officially under arrest for the murders of Andrew Kinsman and Salim Essen. While in his
apartment, police take the time to do a thorough search and according to Nick Westall's reporting
for global news they find a bag that had duct tape, a surgical glove, rope, zip ties, a bungee cord
and syringes inside along with jewelry belonging to Skanda and a notebook of Salim's. Police interrogate
Bruce for like 10 hours and while he's very polite he's not willing to admit to anything
nor is he going to point them in the direction of where the bodies of the missing men are.
And here's the thing, remember this guy is a landscaper, he had hundreds of clients that
had access to hundreds of properties and nothing about a landscaper digging a hole is even going
to be remotely suspicious. I had completely forgotten he was a landscaper. Right but as
police are like thinking about this and like looking at his client list there was one specific
property among the list of hundreds that sticks out to police the most. 53 Mallory Crescent,
a home in the wealthy Leeside neighborhood outside Toronto. The owners were close friends
of the MacArthur family and in exchange for Bruce's landscaping services they actually let him
store his tools on their property so Bruce is like in and out of this place several times a day.
Police went to the Mallory street house with cadaver dogs focusing their attention on the
backyard of the property but the dogs weren't interested in that they kept coming back to
these huge planters there were 15 of them stationed all around the property. Now mind you this is
mid-January in Canada and everything including the soil in these planters is frozen solid so police
decide to take the whole lot of them back to their forensics lab and x-ray them and that's when they
see it clear as day a rib cage in total they find the remains of seven victims inside those planters.
Wait seven I thought there were five. There were more victims than police even knew.
Eight days after Bruce's arrest police lay three more murder charges on him for the murders of
Hamid Qayhan, Sarush Mamoudi and Dean Lissawick. So who are the two new victims? Sarush was 50
years old married and living in Scarborough Ontario which is part of what's called the
Greater Toronto Area but like 40 minutes outside of Toronto proper. Now he was reported missing
by his wife on April 22nd 2015 but by the time he had been reported missing he had been gone for like
a week and police investigated his disappearance but he didn't get connected to the men missing
from the village at any point and Dean Lissawick hadn't been reported missing at all. He was one
of thousands of people living on the streets of Toronto staying at shelters when he could get a
bed and he just got by by panhandling on church street and with sex work. In February police
charged Bruce with Scanda's murder. In April another charge this one for Besir and then a
couple of days later they lay on an eighth murder charge. An eighth? This one is for a man named
Krishna Kumar Kanagaratnam who'd arrived in Vancouver Canada on a cargo ship in 2010.
According to the catching a serial killer documentary he was one of hundreds of Sri
Lankans fleeing the war and looking for refuge. Twice he'd claimed asylum and twice that claim
was denied. He was about to be deported but he fled to Toronto and went underground instead.
That was January 2016. Krishna Kumar had been in pretty regular contact with his family back in
Sri Lanka. I mean he called home every few weeks. He'd always find a way to send money basically
cobbling together what he could while working odd jobs for cash but when his family stopped
hearing from him they just assumed that he had to go deeper underground hiding from authorities.
And I mean even if they didn't think that it's not like they could report him missing because
if they did and he was found he'd be deported anyway. Exactly. Okay so that's eight murder charges
but you said police only found the remains of seven men in those planters. I guess how can they lay
eight charges on Bruce with only seven bodies? Well police still haven't found Hamid's body but
they must have had enough evidence without it to still lay the charge. So you know what I'm
thinking is potentially maybe one of those photos but I don't know for sure. But here's the thing
I mean at this point they are also not ruling out the possibility that there are even more bodies,
more victims out there buried in planters at other houses all over Toronto. I mean like I said Bruce
had over a hundred regular landscaping clients and any one of them could be concealing remains
without even knowing it. In May of that year once the snow melted police sent cadaver dogs out to
all of those properties to search but the dogs don't find anything. So in July they head back
to the Mallory Crescent property where they still have a huge backyard that turns into a ravine
that turns into a park and just like a bunch of green space. Within an hour of their dig on Mallory
investigators find a body in a garbage pail and this is Hamid. Okay Ashley can we pause for a second?
Yeah. Why didn't they start at the Mallory place in May when the snow melted like that's where the
bodies were found in the first place. Right and that was the one that they pointed out like all
these tools were there he came in with the most. I feel like there's been a place that he frequented,
it was a place that was normal for him to be, he was doing their landscaping, they had already
confirmed there were remains on the property. Why start on his list of hundreds of other clients?
Yeah so much of this investigation feels backwards to me like even going back to like his computer
when they spent how many months just like looking through the files and then they look at the deleted
files like maybe we should start. Okay we all know you need to go to the deleted emails first
like that's the first place you go. Start in the trash yeah all of it you're not wrong all of it
feels backwards but they're at the Mallory property now and for nine days they continue to dig,
to sift and to search and according to Nicole Brockbank's timeline for CBC quote
investigators say they dug up human remains nearly every day they were there end quote.
So you mean there were more victims? Not that I'm aware of this is what's so strange they say
that they found remains every day of that dig but Hammond's body was out of there within an hour so
I don't know I don't know if they were finding additional parts to the people they already
found or if they found things that can't be linked to anyone else I don't know what I do
know is that after this search ends police say they have no reason to believe that there are more
victims and the people who own that home you know where every all these bodies were found
did police investigate them for any involvement in the murders yeah police did look into them but
they were cleared pretty quickly okay but what about the roommate you said at least you know
some of the victims died in that apartment did the roommate ever suspect anything apparently not
okay but you said that Bruce's apartment is 19 stories up right yeah how did Bruce manage to get
the bodies out of his bedroom past this roommate down 19 floors on an elevator and out to the suburbs
without anyone noticing yeah I have not been able to answer that question for myself like
none of the sources I use for this episode cover that in detail basically the closest I got was
that globe story that I mentioned by Nick Westall it says quote a forensic expert determined
MacArthur moved and mixed the body parts after the remains were already decomposed and skeletonized
end quote so that statement says that basically he kept the bodies in his apartment until after
they were decomposed and skeletonized like and again the roommate didn't notice anything not a
smell not weird he keeps that door locked like nothing this is what I can't figure out is the
roommate has always been like this question mark to me because I understand what you're saying like
yes you would see bodies being moved out if you're saying okay well he wasn't moving bodies he was
moving skeletons okay then you have your bodies decomposing in your apartment how did neighbors
not even smell that and I do think that's what happened that's how I read the statement and
like I wish I knew more and this is the kind of thing that ordinarily would come out through
a trial and through expert testimony but the reason we still have so many questions years later
is that there was no trial because ultimately Bruce pleads guilty on all eight counts first
degree murder carries an automatic sentence in Canada of life without the chance of parole for
25 years now the crown at the time once Bruce imprisoned for 50 years before he's eligible
for parole but justice John McMahon says he can serve all of his time concurrently so parole after
25 years for killing eight people yeah I mean I think it's total bullshit I mean I guess he'll be
what in his 90s before he can apply for parole I mean you know assuming he even lives that long
yeah I mean even then the chances that he will ever be paroled are very very slim almost none
honestly so Bruce MacArthur heads off to prison where he belongs where the community says he
should have been long ago and would have been if police had listened to them when they said
something was going on that a serial killer was in the village but police didn't listen well and
I mean not only did they not listen they in my opinion actively downplayed or outright dismissed
the community's concerns and I mean even in the press conference that we mentioned earlier
they may have even outright lied yet the public demanded to know what went so wrong and why and
more than that they wanted to know how Toronto police were going to fix it retired Ontario
Court of Appeal Justice Gloria Epstein was tapped to do an independent review of the police investigations
into Bruce MacArthur along with the deaths of Tess Richie and Elora Wells who I mentioned earlier
now her report missing and missed was just released in April after an almost three year
review period it's over a thousand pages and includes 151 recommendations for Toronto police
on how to improve missing persons investigations and build stronger relationships within the
communities they serve Toronto police has committed to implementing all the recommendations but
it's going to take a long time for Toronto police to rebuild what has always been a complicated and
often fractured relationship with the community Bruce MacArthur terrorized his community for
nearly a decade he invaded what had been a safe space for so many people for Scanda,
Bessir and Hamid for Sarush and Dean for Salim, Andrew and Krishna Kumar and for so many others
more than that he prayed on the most vulnerable within an already marginalized community men
who were vulnerable because of who they were as gay or bisexual men because of their immigration
status because of mental health alcohol or drug addiction and often vulnerable because of the
secrets they were keeping from the people in their lives so if you've been out there celebrating
pride this year or you're planning to still remember to reflect on how this movement started
and what it still stands for pride is a protest and as long as there are stories like this one
out there it will always be a protest you can find all of the source material for this episode
on our website crime junkie podcast dot com and be sure to follow us on instagram at
crime junkie podcast we'll be back next week with a brand new episode but stick around for
profit of the month
crime junkie is an audio chuck production so what do you think chuck do you approve
okay ashley i'm gonna tell the listeners exactly what i told you this morning before we even started
recording gave me a warning this is a happy story but i think you'll still cry well that
that doesn't say a lot for me but hopefully our listeners don't cry much either i cried writing
this so i i'm pretty sure this one's still a tear trigger but we'll see i'm just giving you all
the warning people thanked me for not ruining their makeup as they were doing it last time so i'm
putting it out there so most of the profit stories i tell are either gotcha stories or
or moving out stories but this one is a little bit different today i'm going to tell you about
magic and his family our listener mia from maryland said that magic came to her family via
craigslist they've always been a big pet family they have a cat some turtles a bearded dragon
dogs and a couple of fish and i'm only mentioning their names because i want to hear you laugh
ashley okay the fish are named june and swim shady i too love that i knew he would so
me his mom was on craigslist and saw a posting about a boxer lab puppy his owner was working
14 hour days and the puppy spent all of that time in his crate and the owner knew it just wasn't
fair and the pup needed to go to someone who could spend time with him so me his mom is a kindred
she was like absolutely no way i can ignore this we have to call and after the owner interviewed
the family and a few other respondents to the ad he picked mia's family and mia said for 12 years
they've always been so thankful that the owner you know made the right decision and they've loved
every single second of having magic in their lives until something went terribly wrong her
family went on vacation over christmas 2019 and a few days into the new year 2020 all the way to
hawaii and as usual when they went on family trips magic went to stay with his great aunt who
like goes all out for him she even cooks magic breakfast and dinner like every single day like
this is like a vacation for magic too you know i love it yes so on new year's eve
mia's family got a call from this great aunt magic had gotten out and was missing
her entire family packed up and flew home to maryland from hawaii the very next day cutting
their vacation short wow yeah and she said the entire flight home they spent crying and worrying
and posting on social media and praying he'd be home safe and sound by the time they landed
but that wasn't the case so they get home and go into full hardcore operation mode they made
flyers friends were making and posting signs around town they even brought out like a professional
tracker looking to like literally hunt magic down how which she said was not super successful
obviously but the tracker gave them gave them some tips and tricks to keep in mind now the house
where magic went missing from was actually right next to where mia went to school so all of her
friends and classmates and even like teachers and administrators were like on the lookout for him
and the family was getting tips and sightings about him all the time but no one could ever
catch him not even mia's grandpa or mom you know when they would spot him he'd just bolt like he
wouldn't go to anyone and remember this is early january in maryland it is freezing cold and boxers
aren't known for having like a thick coat of fur right and magic isn't a young pup anymore he's
over 12 years old so everyone was even more concerned because magic had gone from this fully cooked
meal every morning and night right to be exposed to the harsh elements of an east coast winner
like literally in the blink of an eye so the days slowly passed and on day five the search
finally came to an end and that's literally mia what you wrote you've been paying attention
wait to our cliffhangers because this was good i was like reaping at this point so bravo good
writing skills it came to an end because they found him yes oh thank god mia you didn't you did
us dirty girl you tricked the tricksters god what like this family though this story like i should
show you how much this dog is loved i mean put aside the dinners and the breakfasts and all that
like for them to like their entire family to pack up their vacation and come home oh my gosh and like
i've gone to hawaii from indiana that is not a short flight they've come from maryland like this
is they spent like a day and a half just getting home for magic i'm just uh so anyway continuing
on let's tell the happy part of this story mia said she knew this would happen but on the fifth day
of the search her dad who was magic's most favorite person in the world got a tip that magic was nearby
so he rushes over to the area but no magic and starts walking back to his car after searching
around little and he looks over and magic is standing there at the top of a hill majestic and
that's when his dad goes back to some of the advice that the tracker had given him and he kind of
of heads towards magic but not directly kind of almost like a round in a circle so he wouldn't
scare him you know and as he gets close he pulls out the big guns he has chicken nuggets
and he starts tossing chicken nuggets towards magic and magic starts inching closer and closer
eating the nuggets but he was still really skittish and wary and once magic was what
me his dad thought was close enough he forgot everything the tracker about not looking the
dog straight in the eye because that can be perceived as you know intimidating or threatening
and he gets down and looks magic straight in the eye and says magic do you want to come home
and magic gently went right into his arms and started quietly whimpering he finally had his
daddy back and was heading home this is where I start crying oh stinking magic I hope he had
the time of his life out there while he worried his family have to death seriously so in the car
magic got the entire bag of chicken nuggets and once they got home the whole family sat around
and loved on him and magic fell asleep right next to Mia's dad and you know Mia said that of course
this was incredibly traumatic for her family but they learned some important lessons now magic and
his puppet sister Maui were tracking collars basically all of the time but most importantly
they learned that you are the one that knows your puppet best if her dad hadn't trusted his
instincts this may not have been how magic story is continuing and I'm going to quote me directly
here quote so trust yourself like your dog trusts you and love them every day like it's your last
day on earth and quote