Canadian serial killer found guilty of murdering four women

BBC Family of Rebecca Contois hold up her photo outside a Winnipeg courthouse following Friday's verdict BBC
Family of Rebecca Contois hold up her photo outside a Winnipeg courthouse following Friday's verdict

Tearful cheers erupted in a packed Canadian court on Thursday as a serial killer was found guilty of murdering four indigenous women.

But in the court gallery, Jeremy Contois' reaction was reserved.

His younger sister, Rebecca, was one of the women murdered in Winnipeg, Manitoba two years ago.

“I feel a little sense of relief,” Mr Contois said, but added that she would not get full closure until the killer, Jeremy Skibicki, is formally sentenced.

Manitoba Court of King's Bench Chief Justice Glenn Joyal dismissed the defence's claim that the accused was schizophrenic and not criminally responsible.

Prosecutors argued that Skibicki, 37, killed Ms Contois and three other women in 2022 in calculated and racially motivated crimes.

Warning: This story contains details readers may find distressing.

The murders and subsequent trial sent shockwaves through Canada’s indigenous community, which has long grappled with cases of violence against their women.

Wearing a grey T-shirt and trousers, Skibicki did not react as Judge Joyal read the the summary of his judgement.

One of Ms Contois’ family members held up a large photo of Rebecca in his direction as he left the court.

“Why did I lift up her photo? Because we, as First Nations people, are not statistics,” Krista Fox said afterwards.

“Every single one of us has a name, and a family that misses us dearly.”

Skibicki's victims are Morgan Harris, 39, Marcedes Myran, 26 and Ms Contois, who was 24. The fourth woman has yet to be identified, and has been given the name Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe, meaning Buffalo Woman, by indigenous elders.

Throughout the trial, a buffalo head sat on a red cloth on a table near the prosecutors in tribute to the still unidentified victim.

Judge Joyal dismissed the evidence of a British psychiatrist, Dr Sohom Das, who said Skibicki was delusional when he committed the murders.

The judge added that the "mercilessly graphic" facts of the case "are largely uncontested", given that the accused had admitted to the murders to police and in court before the trial.

Skibicki had pleaded not guilty due to a mental disorder.

The 100-person courtroom was packed with the four women's families and friends for the verdict.

Judge Joyal said the case has had an "undeniable and profound impact on the entire Manitoba community, indigenous and non-indigenous".

With Skibicki facing life behind bars, the focus is now shifting to finding the remains of two of his victims, Ms Myran and Ms Harris, which are believed to be in a Winnipeg landfill.

A formal search has been set for this autumn, after months of pressure from their families.

Jeremy Contois
Jeremy Contois said a guilty verdict was the outcome he had hoped for

'Intentional and purposeful' murders

According to court documents, Skibicki killed the women between March and May of 2022, with Ms Contois believed to be the final victim.

He met at least two at local homeless shelters in Winnipeg, a city of 820,000 in the prairie province.

Judge Joyal agreed with prosecutors that he deliberately targeted and exploited “vulnerable” women.

Over the course of the trial, the court heard that Skibicki had assaulted the women, strangled or drowned them and then committed sex acts on them before dismembering their bodies and disposing of them in rubbish bins.

The killings went undetected for months, until a man looking for scrap metal in a bin outside Skibicki’s apartment found partial human remains in May 2022 and called police.

“She’s obviously been murdered,” the man said in the 911 call, which was played in court.

Police were able to identify the remains as those of Ms Contois.

More of her remains were discovered at a city-run landfill the following month.

In police interviews shortly after his arrest, Skibicki surprised officers by admitting to killing Ms Contois as well as three others.

At that point, police had no knowledge of the other deaths.

Speaking outside court, Ms Fox said she believes that it was only because Ms Contois’ remains were found that the other families were able to get justice.

Skibicki’s lawyers tried to argue that he was not aware of the severity of his actions due to delusions driven by schizophrenia. They argued he was hearing voices that told him to commit the crimes as part of a mission from god.

Prosecutors argued that Skibicki was fully aware of his actions, saying they were “intentional, purposeful and racially motivated”.

They demonstrated this through a mix of DNA forensic evidence, surveillance footage showing Skibicki with the women in their final days, as well as testimony from his ex-wife, who detailed a history of physical abuse.

Had Skibicki been found not criminally responsible for the four murders, it would have been a relative rarity in Canadian law.

According to data from Canada's statistics agency and reported by the Globe and Mail newspaper, between 2000 and 2022, of 8,883,749 criminal cases prosecuted across the country, only 5,178 – or 0.06% – had such verdicts.

AFP via Getty Images Red dresses on crosses are displayed at the entrance of a makeshift camp near near the Prairie Green landfill in Winnipeg, ManitobaAFP via Getty Images
Red dresses on crosses are displayed at the entrance of a makeshift camp near the Prairie Green landfill in Winnipeg, where the bodies of two of the killer's victims are believed to be

The case unearthed deep wounds for Canada’s indigenous community, which has long grappled with a high number of cases of their women going missing or being murdered.

According to an investigation by the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, Winnipeg - a city near numerous indigenous communities - had the highest number of missing and murdered indigenous women in Canada between 2018 and 2022.

Across Canada, indigenous women are 12 times more likely to be murdered or go missing than other women, according to a 2019 inquiry.

Some indigenous women in the city remain missing, sparking fears from family members that Skibicki had more victims.

The Crown, however, said they do not believe he murdered more women.

Even with the relief of a guilty verdict, Mr Contois, Rebecca’s brother, said he still wonders why his sister - who is also a mother to a young daughter - was so brutally murdered.

“Why did he have to do it?” he said. “I wish I knew that.”