Les électeurs ont rendez-vous le 20 septembre - L Hebdo du St-Maurice
lhebdodustmaurice.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lhebdodustmaurice.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Un regroupement de citoyen refuse l agrandissement de l aéroport de Trois-Rivières
fm1069.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from fm1069.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Article content
She lived with a killer for a decade and yet never suspected a thing.
Ken Jessop still finds it hard to believe even after Heather Hoover recently broke her silence and spoke to
CBC News about her ex-husband Calvin Hoover.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser, or MANDEL: Did Christine Jessop s killer strike again? Back to video
After 36 painful years, Jessop finally learned in October that Hoover, a family friend, had been identified by Toronto Police as the man who abducted and murdered his little sister, Christine.
But he would never have to answer for his horrendous crime. He had taken his own life in 2015.
Illustration by Ben Clarkson
Few children in Canada just vanish. Fewer still stay gone for longer than a couple of days. Some are found alive, others are hurt or killed, but rarely does a child simply disappear. The RCMP’s National Centre for Missing Persons and Unidentified Remains database lists 147 missing children, in a country of more than 35 million people. Of the sixty children under the age of twelve, a quarter are thought to have been abducted by their parents. A large portion of the others were lost to apparent accidents or misadventure, falling through ice or swept away in the pull of wild rivers, their bodies never recovered. The database shows twenty-four children in the past sixty years who have inexplicably disappeared. Because there are so few, we know them. In Edmonton, there is Tania Murrell, six when she vanished while walking home from school for lunch in January 1983. In Toronto, Nicole Morin, eight when she disappeared from a condominium building in July 1985