B.C. serial killer Robert Pickton savagely attacked in prison, clinging to life

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B.C. serial killer Robert Pickton savagely attacked in prison, clinging to life
Pickton was speared in the head with a broken broom-like handle, a source told Postmedia

Author of the article:Kim Bolan, Lori Culbert
Published May 20, 2024 • Last updated 5 hours ago • 3 minute read

Robert Pickton
Robert Pickton
Notorious B.C. serial killer Robert (Willie) Pickton was on life support Monday after a brutal attack by another prisoner in Quebec’s maximum Port-Cartier Institution.


Pickton was airlifted to hospital after the assault, which sources say took place just before 2 p.m. local time on Sunday, May 19.


One source said the attacker had earlier assaulted other inmates at the prison before being moved to segregation. The attack on Pickton allegedly happened after the prisoner was then released back onto the same unit as the serial killer, Postmedia has learned.

Pickton was speared in the head with a broken broom-like handle, another source said.

The Correctional Service Canada confirmed to Postmedia late Monday that Pickton was the victim of a “major assault.” But they wouldn’t comment on his medical condition. In an earlier news release, the CSC said “the Sûreté du Québec is presently investigating the incident. The assailant has been identified and the appropriate actions have been taken.”


No one at the Port-Cartier Institution would comment Monday.

“We don’t have somebody who can speak with you,” the person answering the phone at the high-security prison said. “Call tomorrow and somebody will speak with you.”

When contacted by phone and asked about whether his client had been attacked in prison and was now in hospital with a serious brain injury, Pickton’s lawyer Ian Runkle said Monday: “I don’t have anything I can say at this point. That may change, but nothing I can pass along at this point.”

Port-Cartier Institution is located approximately 600 kilometres from Québec city.
Port-Cartier Institution is located approximately 600 kilometres from Quebec City.
Sources said Pickton had been taken to Hospital of the Child Jesus in Quebec City. Postmedia called the hospital and asked specifically about Pickton’s condition.

An official in admissions said they had “nothing to share at this time due to confidentiality.”


Pickton told other inmates that he was writing a book blaming the murders of women, for which he was convicted, on someone else.

Port-Cartier Institution holds 237 men and is just north of the St. Lawrence River and about 600 kilometres from Québec City.

Pickton, now 74, was convicted by a jury of murdering six women — Sereena Abotsway, Mona Wilson, Andrea Joesbury, Brenda Ann Wolfe, Georgina Papin and Marnie Frey — at his 2007 B.C. Supreme Court trial.

But he was also charged with killing 21 more women. Those counts were eventually stayed and never heard at trial.

On top of those cases, the DNA of another six women was found on Pickton’s Port Coquitlam farm, but no additional charges were ever laid.

The former pig farmer once bragged to an undercover officer in his jail cell that he killed 49 women. More than 60 women had vanished from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside before Pickton’s arrest in February 2002.


Lorimer Shenher, a writer and former lead Vancouver Police detective on the missing women investigation, said Monday that he had got word of the weekend attack on Pickton.

“Obviously, Mr. Pickton has caused a lot of pain for many people. Unfortunately, all an attack like this serves to do is further thwart the truth of this case from being told so that all the remaining perpetrators could be brought to justice,” Shenher said. “It’s been an open secret for more than 20 years that these murders were not committed solely by the hands of Robert Pickton.”

In recent months, families of his victims and advocates for other missing women have spoken out against a B.C. Supreme Court application made by the RCMP to destroy more than 14,000 exhibits seized from Pickton’s property during the lengthy investigation.


The critics said that destroying the exhibits might impact future investigations, especially if there continue to be advances in forensic technology that have already led to resolutions in decades-old cold cases.

The RCMP insists the evidence no longer has any investigative value. The force said a small number of the 14,000 items, which range from clothing to furniture, belonged to missing women, and will be returned to their families. The application is set to be heard next month.

Pickton was eligible for day parole in February, prompting outrage from victims’ relatives and several politicians who said he should never be released.

kbolan@postmedia.com

lculbert@postmedia.com

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’Happy tears’ of victim’s sister after prison attack on serial killer Robert Pickton
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published May 21, 2024 • 4 minute read

MONTREAL — Cynthia Cardinal says she was “overwhelmed” with happiness when she received a text message on Monday with the news that serial killer Robert Pickton, who murdered her sister Georgina Papin, was in a life-threatening condition after being attacked in prison.


She calls it “karma.”


The text came from a cousin of Tanya Holyk, another missing woman whose DNA was found at Pickton’s pig farm in Port Coquitlam, B.C.

“I don’t think anybody that evil should be walking on Earth, as far as I’m concerned,” Cardinal said on Tuesday. “I have happy tears. Very happy tears.”

Correctional Service Canada confirmed Tuesday that the B.C. serial killer was the inmate injured in a “major assault” Sunday at a Quebec prison.

Quebec provincial police said that 74-year-old Pickton was taken to hospital with injuries that were considered life-threatening.

Police spokesman Hugues Beaulieu added that a 51-year-old suspect was in custody.

Federal Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc said he was informed late Sunday and his thoughts immediately turned to the families of Pickton’s victims in British Columbia as well as the officers at the Quebec correctional facility.


Dozen Metro Vancouver mayors say serial killer Robert Pickton should never be paroled

LeBlanc called Pickton “one of the most dangerous criminals in the country” but said he could provide no further details about the incident or Pickton’s condition available due to privacy laws. The minister did not name Pickton, but responded when asked about him.

“When we think about the inmate who was assaulted, when we say his name, we think about the victims, about the families,” LeBlanc said in French, adding Correctional Service Canada has a process in place to review such circumstances.

“One of the primary concerns I have obviously is around the security of these institutions and the men and women who work in these prisons,” he said in English.


Pickton was convicted of six counts of second-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison in 2007, with the maximum parole ineligibility period of 25 years, after being charged with the murders of 26 women.

The remains or DNA of 33 women, many who were taken from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, were found on Pickton’s farm, and he once bragged to an undercover police officer that he killed a total of 49.

Pickton’s confirmed victims were Papin, Sereena Abotsway, Mona Wilson, Andrea Joesbury, Brenda Ann Wolfe and Marnie Frey.

Cardinal, 63, said she felt that authorities suppressed information about Pickton, noting that she got word of the attack not from officials but from Lorelei Williams, Holyk’s cousin.

She remembered her sister as “full of life” and a great mother to her seven children, the youngest of whom was only one year old when Papin went missing.


“She had so much talent. She also had a fierce temper though because as sisters we argued, you know how that is, but she was very tough,” said Cardinal.

She said the past two decades had been tough on Papin’s family, and that every time Pickton’s name came up it “kind of triggers you back to that time.”

The latest news, though, brought with it “a great feeling.”

“I think, karma, and he had it coming, to me, a long time ago,” she said.

At the time of Pickton’s sentencing, B.C. Supreme Court Justice James Williams said it was a “rare case that properly warrants the maximum period of parole ineligibility available to the court.”

The correctional service first announced on Monday that an inmate had been sent to hospital after a serious assault at the maximum security Port-Cartier Institution, about 480 km northeast of Quebec City.


It said Tuesday the assault did not involve any of its staff.

Police began searching the Pickton farm in the Vancouver suburb of Port Coquitlam more than 22 years ago in what would be a years-long investigation into the disappearances of dozens of women, many of them from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

Vancouver police were criticized for not taking the cases seriously because many of the missing were sex workers or drug users.

Pickton became eligible for day parole in February, which sparked outrage from advocates, politicians and victims’ family members who criticized Canada’s justice system, saying he should never be released from prison.

Four years ago, the RCMP applied to dispose of evidence found at a Ruskin, B.C., property linked to Pickton and being held at RCMP warehouses.


Items include pieces of clothing, shoes and hair pins — including one with hair still in it — as well as more daunting pieces of evidence, such as a sex toy and a rusty bolt-action rifle.

The RCMP’s application argued that the items were taking up substantial space and their storage continues to run up costs. It said the evidence in question will not affect future prosecution.

In an email Tuesday, RCMP Staff Sgt. Kris Clark confirmed the application remains before the courts and the process is ongoing.

A group of families, lawyers and advocates sent a letter to the federal public safety ministry in December calling for a halt to the disposal plan.

— By Morgan Lowrie in Montreal and Nono Shen and Chuck Chiang in Vancouver
 

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Plan to wake serial killer Robert Pickton from coma: Quebec police
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published May 23, 2024 • 1 minute read

QUEBEC — A spokesman for Quebec’s provincial police says British Columbia serial killer Robert Pickton is in a medically induced coma after a prison attack and doctors planned to try to wake him soon.


Sgt. Hugues Beaulieu says the plan to wake Pickton in the next few days and see if he can survive on his own was current as of Wednesday, but he wasn’t sure if it has since changed.


Police previously said Pickton was in a life-threatening condition after Sunday’s attack at the maximum-security Port-Cartier Institution, about 480 kilometres northeast of Quebec City.

Correctional Service Canada said Pickton was the victim of a “major assault” and prison officers had not been involved.

Pickton was convicted of six counts of second-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison in 2007 after being charged with the murders of 26 women.

Beaulieu previously said that a 51-year-old suspect was in custody after the attack on Pickton.
 

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Search for truth continues regardless of Pickton’s fate: Advocates
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Brieanna Charlebois and Nono Shen
Published May 26, 2024 • 5 minute read
Advocates for alleged victims of B.C. serial killer Robert Pickton say they remain focused on getting justice for the women, as Pickton lies in a Quebec hospital in a coma after being attacked in prison.
Advocates for alleged victims of B.C. serial killer Robert Pickton say they remain focused on getting justice for the women, as Pickton lies in a Quebec hospital in a coma after being attacked in prison.
VANCOUVER — Advocates for alleged victims of British Columbia serial killer Robert Pickton say they remain focused on getting justice for the women, as Pickton lies in a Quebec hospital in a coma after being attacked in prison.


Angela Marie MacDougall, executive director of Vancouver-based Battered Women’s Support Services, reflected on the weekend assault that left Pickton with what police called life-threatening injuries, saying “There’s something to be said about jailhouse justice.”


But regardless of his fate, she said the fight on behalf of the women Pickton was accused of killing continues.

She said that includes a legal application opposing an RCMP bid to destroy about 14,000 pieces of evidence collected in the Pickton investigation.

There are also multiple ongoing lawsuits by family members of victims against Pickton and his brother, David Pickton.


Jason Gratl, the lawyer representing family members of victims in nine lawsuits against the brothers, said the potential death of the killer would have no bearing on proceedings.

“Robert William Pickton’s state of health or well-being — I don’t anticipate it will have any significant effect on the progress of the civil trial,” he said in an interview Thursday.

“Based on his self-published book, The Fall Guy, I didn’t anticipate that he would have any constructive contribution to make at the trial.”

Pickton was convicted in 2007 on six counts of second-degree murder of six women, but is suspected of killing many more who went missing from Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

He bragged to an undercover officer of killing 49 women and the remains or DNA of 33 women, many of them taken from the Downtown Eastside, were found on Pickton’s pig farm in Port Coquitlam, B.C.


Police in Quebec said Thursday that Pickton, who was attacked Sunday at the maximum-security Port-Cartier Institution, was in a medically induced coma but that doctors planned to try to wake him soon.

Gratl said a bigger issue than whether Pickton survives is the potential destruction of the evidence.

“I act as legal counsel for 16 children of nine women who were killed by Robert Pickton,” he said. “It’s in their interest to preserve the evidence seized by the RCMP on the Pickton farm to allow my clients to prove that Robert Pickton and David Pickton caused them to suffer loss.”

In 2014, the botched investigation into Pickton resulted in a settlement of $50,000 for the victims’ children who had sued all three levels of government and the RCMP.


MacDougall’s group is a signatory to a letter to the B.C. government calling for the exhibits to be preserved.

“It has an element of profound and deep significance because it is a representation of all those women and those families that did not receive justice through the criminal system,” she said of the evidence.

About four years ago, B.C. Mounties applied to dispose of the material found at a Ruskin, B.C., property linked to Pickton. It is now being held at RCMP warehouses.

Items range from pieces of clothing, shoes and hairpins — including one with hair still in it — to a sex toy and a rusty .303-calibre bolt-action rifle.

The RCMP has argued that the items were taking up substantial space and continued to run up costs. It said the evidence in question had been captured and retained and would not affect future prosecution.


In an email, RCMP Staff Sgt. Kris Clark confirmed that the application to destroy it remained before the courts and the process was ongoing.

The letter opposing the destruction of that evidence, sent to the provincial government on Dec. 11 by the groups Justice for Girls and the Missing/Murdered Database, and endorsed by dozens of organizations and individuals, spoke to the damage that would be done to the families seeking justice.

“Twenty of the charges against Pickton were stayed, and have not yet resulted in any convictions,” it said. “For the families of those victims, justice has been elusive and they still hold hope that one day they will know what happened to their loved ones.”

In another argument for the preservation, the letter said statements by the defence, Crown and jury also “strongly suggest a shared belief that he did not act alone and others may be implicated in the deaths of the six women Robert Pickton was convicted of killing.”


Gratl echoed this.

“In addition to my client’s more narrow interests, there are a number of community organizations that oppose the destruction of evidence on the basis that the investigation into who killed the women on the Pickton farm should not be concluded because Robert Pickton likely had accomplices,” he said.

“The destruction of evidence seized by the RCMP would preclude a meaningful investigation (of) accomplices and would certainly preclude any prosecution.”

The Vancouver Rape Relief & Women’s Shelter is also among those calling for a halt to the RCMP’s disposal plan.

Hilla Kerner, a spokeswoman for the shelter, said the destruction of the evidence and Pickton’s potential death could mean no justice at all for those whose deaths did not result in a conviction.


“There is never ultimate justice, but in so many cases, there is no justice at all,” she said.

“Our debt to the women who lost their lives, our debt to their families, our debt to the women who are now entrenched in homelessness, in poverty, in drug addiction — the province did not pay this debt.”

She said femicide is a “staggering problem” in B.C. and across Canada, and Pickton’s case showcased this.

“The Pickton story — the tragic, horrific stories of its victims — is a story about terrible male violence, but also terrible, terrible state abandonment of the women who were killed, and I’m afraid we’re not better off yet.”

Lydia Hwitsum, director at B.C. First Nations Justice Council, said the handling of the Pickton case also puts a spotlight on issues facing the Indigenous community.

“Not much has changed to improve outcomes for Indigenous women’s safety” in the years since Pickton was convicted, she said in an interview.

Hwitsum also called for the preservation of evidence.

“The pathway to justice has not been reached for so many that have been harmed at the hands of Pickton,” she said. “The evidence that’s there speaks to what our people have gone through and it is critical to hold onto that.”
 

petros

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Low Earth Orbit
VANCOUVER — Advocates for alleged victims of British Columbia serial killer Robert Pickton say they remain focused on getting justice for the women, as Pickton lies in a Quebec hospital in a coma after being attacked in prison.
They'll never get justice without senior VPD, Burnaby RCMP and Coquitlam RCMP rattling bars.
 
Last edited:

bob the dog

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Saying they know he did not do it all on his own. Sad detective work if all they had was waiting on him to name names.

Speared through the head with a broken broomstick handle sounds serious.
 

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Loved ones of Edmonton-area Pickton victim hope pig farm evidence can be saved
“We can't forget about the victims. Even though he wasn't charged with all of them, we can't forget about all the other women that he wasn't charged with."

Author of the article:Jackie Carmichael
Published May 27, 2024 • Last updated 2 days ago • 4 minute read

As convicted serial killer Robert Pickton clings to life in Quebec after being stabbed by a fellow inmate, family members of one of his Edmonton area victims wait for justice — and for answers.

“I want to feel like it’s completely closed, and I have a feeling … the whole truth is not out yet,” said Kristina Batemen, daughter of Pickton victim Georgina Papin, who was from the Enoch Cree First Nation, bordering Edmonton’s western edge.

Although he was convicted in 2007 for the deaths of six women, Pickton once bragged to an undercover cop that he had killed 49 women. The remains or DNA of 33 women were found on Pickton’s pig farm in Port Coquitlam, B.C.

Georgina Papin’s remains were discovered at the Pickton farm in July 2002.

Stabbed a week ago with a broken-off broom handle wielded by another inmate at the maximum-security Port-Cartier Institution, Pickton lay in an induced coma in a Quebec hospital as doctors weighed whether to wake him up to see if he could survive.

Bateman, who lives in Las Vegas, is party to one of several ongoing lawsuits filed by Vancouver lawyer Jason Gratl against Pickton and his brother, David Pickton, by family members of victims.

Like her lawyer, Bateman believes Pickton had an accomplice.

“He mentioned to authorities that other people were involved — investigators should still be looking into the allegations. I don’t feel like justice has been served completely,” said Bateman.

“And I’m still going to always be trying to find the truth — more of the truth.”

Gratl, representing family members of victims in nine lawsuits against the Pickton brothers, has said the potential death of the killer would have no bearing on proceedings.

“Robert William Pickton’s state of health or well-being — I don’t anticipate it will have any significant effect on the progress of the civil trial,” he told The Canadian Press.

A B.C. Supreme Court hearing is scheduled for June 26 to hear applications for standing in the RCMP’s bid to dispose of 14,000 pieces of evidence, mostly collected during the 18-month-long search of Pickton’s farm in 2002 and 2003.

Gratl said a bigger issue than whether Pickton survives is the potential destruction of the evidence.

“I act as legal counsel for 16 children of nine women who were killed by Robert Pickton,” he said. “It’s in their interest to preserve the evidence seized by the RCMP on the Pickton farm to allow my clients to prove that Robert Pickton and David Pickton caused them to suffer loss.”

In 2014, the botched investigation into Pickton resulted in a settlement of $50,000 for the victims’ children who had sued all three levels of government and the RCMP.

Gratl said statements by the defence, Crown and jury also “strongly suggest a shared belief that he did not act alone and others may be implicated in the deaths of the six women Robert Pickton was convicted of killing.”

Bateman was raised in Las Vegas by her father’s side of the family, but was close to her mother, and stays in touch with her other surviving seven siblings, the children of Georgina Papin.

She believes that what goes around is coming around for Pickton.

“Karma was definitely involved. For evil people that do things like what he did, I think he definitely deserved it,” Bateman said.

“We can’t forget about the victims. Even though he wasn’t charged with all of them, we can’t forget about all the other women that he wasn’t charged with.”

‘Beautiful and sweet’
Had she lived, Georgina Papin would have turned 60 on March 11.

“I know she’d have been a great grandmother,” Bateman said, wistful for her two children who never got to know their grandmother.

“We talk about her every day, like she’s still in our lives. And we sing happy birthday to her every year.”


Yvette Papin was raised with her cousin, Georgina Papin, spending many happy hours with their mutual grandmother.

She remembers Georgina as sweet and loving, a woman who put others first.

“Georgina never had any issues with anybody at all, not even a fight or an argument. That’s just how beautiful and sweet she was,” she said.

Listening to accounts of the attack that left Pickton near death, Yvette finds herself torn.

“A part of me was sad but a part of me was happy — it just kind of triggered a lot of mixed emotions on what their siblings, the children are going through,” Yvette Papin said.

Pickton deserves to suffer for all the suffering he caused others, she said.

“I don’t wish this upon anyone, but it was expected to turn around and come back to him eventually. I don’t think he’s suffering enough. Don’t get me wrong — I don’t wish suffering on anyone, but what the women went through — I can’t imagine. I will not imagine just what they had to endure before they passed away,” she said.

“This is a lot of trauma not only to the families, but to the investigators,” Yvette Papin said.

“What he got was nothing compared to what he’s done to the women.”



jcarmichael@postmedia.com