KILLER OF EIGHT GETS 25
YEARS IN PRISON
Fortunately for people living in Canada, there aren.t that many serial
killers roaming our streets. However, we learn of them once in a while. This
article is about Bruce McArthur who was a serial killer in Canada.
Bruce McArthur was born on Oct0ber. 8th, 1951, (when it was 19 days before I turned 18 and was
serving in boot camp in the Canadian Navy in Nova Scotia) He spent his childhood with his sister and parents in a
sturdy-looking bungalow speckled by black and red bricks near Woodville, Ontario.
It’s an area in Ontario’s Kawartha Lakes region populated more by farmers than
by cottagers, where it is best to be considered a local rather than an outsider.
McArthur had previously spent years as a travelling salesman
in various cities in the Province of Ontario. He was married and has two sons.
Later he became a landscaper.
Some of McArthur`s victims
were active on online dating apps for men
who have sex with men, in which McArthur stated that he wanted to
meet submissive
men.
McArthur had met
a male sex worker[ on a chat line
and later had sex with him. Just after the noon hour on October 31, 2001,
a few weeks after his 50th birthday, McArthur was invited into the
man's apartment to see his Halloween costume. McArthur struck the man several
times from behind with an iron pipe that he often carried. The victim lost
consciousness and when he became conscious again, he then called 911 and was
taken to St.
Michael's Hospital. He had suffered injuries to his head and body
and needed several stitches on the back of his head and his fingers as well as
six weeks of physiotherapy`
McArthur, who turned himself in
after the attack, said he did not remember the attack or why he might have done
it. Nevertheless, he pleaded guilty to charges of assault with a weapon
and assault causing bodily harm, and on April 11, 2003, received a
conditional sentence of 729 days (two years less a day). A further charge of
carrying a concealed weapon was withdrawn at the time. The Crown
prosecutor had earlier believed jail time was warranted but agreed to a
conditional sentence after psychiatric and pre-sentencing reports suggested
McArthur was a low risk to reoffend. The victim, said by the Crown
attorney to have been traumatized by the incident however, he did not provide a
victim-impact statement for the sentencing, and there were concerns that
McArthur's unexplained behaviour may have been due to the combination of
McArthur's anti-seizure medication with amyl nitrate, or "poppers", a
drug that enhances sexual pleasure.
McArthur avoided being sentenced
to prison and instead he was spending the first year of his sentence under
house arrest followed by a 10 pm curfew for six months, and three years'
probation. During the sentence, he was barred from
Church and Wellesley except for work and medical appointments, had to stay at
least 10 metres (33 feet) from the victim's home or workplace, and could
not spend time with "male prostitutes". He was forbidden to possess
firearms for 10 years. He was not to purchase, possess or consume drugs without
a medical prescription, and specifically not to possess poppers. McArthur had
to submit his DNA to
a database and was compelled to undertake psychological and psychiatric
counselling including anger management.
A criminal defence lawyer found
the list of conditions uncommon and suggested that the judge was concerned that
McArthur was a danger to all male prostitutes. A retired homicide detective
noted that the parole conditions were unenforceable, that they are not
published or made as public knowledge and that parole violators get caught only
if they come to the attention of police.
In 2014, McArthur was granted
a suspension on the conviction which was wiped clean from his record, and
would not have appeared in criminal background checks during subsequent
investigations.
IN Canada, a conditional
discharge means that the defendant has no criminal conviction providing he
meets the criteria of not being a risk to society. In McArthur’s case, most of
his records and exhibits were destroyed in 2010, in compliance with Toronto Police Service retention policy.
The only surviving documents were the transcripts of the guilty plea and
sentencing hearing, the psychiatric report and pre-sentencing report ordered
during the trial, and pictures of the victim's injuries and the weapon.
In 2002, while the
assault case was still before the courts, McArthur had registered with a gay
fetish dating
app for men into BDSM (bondage,
discipline, sadism and masochism) where his profile noted his interest in
submissive men. McArthur joined Facebook in 2011 and catalogued his nightlife
with pictures of parties, vacations, birthday dinners and concerts. Younger men
of South Asian or Middle Eastern descent were in several pictures. By this
time he had become a part of the gay village community and was a regular at its
bars. Since 2007 or 2008, he was living in a 19th-floor
apartment at the Leaside Towers in Thorncliffe Park, a neighbourhood
populated mainly by immigrants about 5 kilometres (3 miles) northeast
of the Church and Wellesley Streets area known as the Gay Village. McArthur's banishment
from the Church and Wellesley area in 2003 remained well-known and he had
developed a reputation for BDSM, rough sex and an explosive temper.
In 2011, Robert
James had been spending time with McArthur, who told him about an incident in a
coffeehouse: when he had been asked to leave, McArthur's temper burst and he
knocked all the glass jars off the counter. James decided to heed advice given
to him to stay away from McArthur, explaining that he had heard disturbing
stories about him. According to James, McArthur turned red and screamed "Fucking
bastards telling stories about me! You're just like the rest of them. You think
I'm crazy."
A. J. Khan
remembered McArthur as a friendly regular at his restaurant, the Church Bistro 555. Towards the end of
2013 when McArthur came into his
restaurant one day alone instead of with his usual companion. Khan noted that he
had seen the man the previous day. He asked McArthur where his friend was. McArthur
said that his boyfriend was on vacation. That was when McArthur angrily left
and never returned to his restaurant.
McArthur had become
a self-employed landscaper operating
under the name Artistic Designs. A
colleague of his who installed water features on three of his projects in 2011
described McArthur as more of a gardener, operating out of a little van with
old tools. He said that McArthur was always accompanied by an older white man,
who appeared to be romantically involved with him, and a day labourer, of
Southeast Asian or Middle Eastern descent.
Most of McArthur's
clients were wealthy elderly women who found him charming, and he had built a
client base through personal recommendations. During the
off-season,(Winter months. McArthur acted as a Santa Claus at the Agincourt Mall and made
floral gifts for charities.
McArthur's separation from his wife was
initially heated, though they later reconciled. His son Todd was reported
to have difficulty accepting his father as a homosexual. In 2014, Todd McArthur
was sentenced to 14 months in jail for making multiple obscene phone calls. He
was released on bail, ordered to stay with his father at his Toronto
apartment and assist with McArthur's landscaping business.
A former friend of Todd's visited him one night
and discovered that on one of the walls of McArthur's bathroom, it was was covered
with photos of naked men with erections. He said that most of the men appeared
to be "East Indian" and that Todd said that they were men whom his
father knew. McArthur did not hide the fact, laughing over it at breakfast.
As an aside, when I was eleven years old in
1945, my mother sent me to North Vancouver to live with a man who was
previously the owner of a private residential school in North Vancouver. I soon
discovered to my horror that he was a
pedophile and was sexually abusing me and the other two boys living there in
his home. When my mother visited me, she
saw photos of naked boys on the walls of his bedroom. She contacted the
Children’s Aid and we were subsequently removed from his home.
Project Houston was an
18-month Toronto
Police Service (TPS) investigation which began in November 2012,
initially looking at the September 6, 2010, disappearance of Skandaraj
"Skanda" Navaratnam. The police had searched Riverdale Park, a
popular LGBT cruising spot, in 2010 with Navaratnam's friends and later with
cadaver dogs and mounted patrols. Two years later, police believed that
Navaratnam had been murdered but had no leads.
According to a 2018 W5
(television series) investigation, a man posted on a cannibal website Zambian Meat in 2012 that he had killed and eaten a man in Toronto,
which had led to the formation of Project
Houston. Was McArthur the cannibal?
The investigation for the missing men became
the largest investigation conducted by the Toronto Police Service who also called
on the resources of the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police and other police and forensic services.
Criticisms of the Toronto Police Service`s handling of the missing persons
investigations have led to a number of internal reviews, an external review
called by the civilian Toronto
Police Services Board and the formation of a dedicated missing
persons unit.
In the summer of 2017, amid public speculation
of a serial killer at the Church and Wellesley area, evidence was gained from
another missing-persons investigation which led TPS to create a second
divisional task force named Project Prism. In January 18th
2018, Project Prism investigators
obtained evidence connecting two disappearances to Bruce McArthur, who was at that time a 66-year-old
self-employed landscaper, whom they promptly arrested.
Robert
MacEachern, a former friend of McArthur when both were attending the same
school, had finished his supper and was sitting in front of the television at
his cattle farm, wanting to watch the news for the next day’s weather but was
stuck on one of his wife’s programs instead. The phone rang. He answered it. It
was his brother on the other end. Did you hear?” he asked.
MacEachern hadn’t seen the news that night, so he’d missed all the stories
about Bruce McArthur,
who was accused of murdering two men who had disappeared from Toronto’s gay
village which is in downtown Toronto, Canada`s largest city. Later the Police
charged McArthur with three more counts of murder. They believed there may be
more to come. Their belief was a valid one. At a press conference they
acknowledged what Toronto’s gay community had long feared—that they now believe
a serial killer had been preying on gay men tied to the Church Street Gay Village
since at least 2012.
Robert McEachern later said that Bruce was an OK man. Bruce
McArthur’s parents were decent folks who took in kids sent to them from the
City of Toronto. Bruce McArthur was also a friendly baker whom neighbours often
saw him carrying trays of muffins around his condo building. So why did Bruce
McArthur turn into a serial killer of men?
Serial killers kill their victims either because they are terrorists,
for revenge or for sexual reasons or even to make a name for themselves. What
was McArthur’s motive? It has been
suggested that sex was his motive and he didn’t want his victims to tell anyone
that he was not fully]heterosexual.
Before he became a fixture in the gay village, McArthur was
married with a wife and fathered two sons and had a home in Oshawa, east of
Toronto. A bankruptcy filing for McArthur from 1999 shows that his house was a
typical suburban home: a two-story detached with a two-car garage on a corner
lot in Oshawa. In the filing, McArthur’s assets were listed as $190,000 against
$277,812 in liabilities
By 2001, McArthur appeared to be living in Toronto. That was
the year he was accused of attacking a man using a metal pipe. According to the
Toronto Star, McArthur was convicted
of assault causing bodily harm in 2003 and ordered to stay away from a swath of
downtown Toronto that included the gay village. He was also forbidden from
meeting with male prostitutes. The court was concerned that he may be a danger
to them.
The police soon after charged McArthur with three additional
counts of first-degree murder, bringing the total victim count to five men and
dating back to 2012. The police announced that that there could be more
charges. They asked any customers of McArthur’s landscaping company to permit
their properties to be searched after remains were found in some planters
connected to McArthur.
McArthur’s landscaping business, Artistic Design, had a list
of roughly 30 clients, The police said that body parts belonging to three
people were found in planters at the back of a yard on Mallory Crescent in the
Toronto neighbourhood of Leaside, (a subdivision of the City of Toronto) where
McArthur reportedly stored equipment in exchange for his landscaping work.
Besides cutting the grass and
blowing leaves, McArthur would cart containers of plants between his red
minivan and the yard. His actions seemed quite normal. Unbeknown to the owners
of the homes he was bring the containers to, they didn’t know that there were
the bones of human bodies in the containers.
Until recently, McArthur was
something of a fixture in the gay village. Of nearly a dozen people in the
village who spoke to the National Post,
all but one said they recognized McArthur. Some said they remembered seeing him
at local bars and others said they just recognized him from the neighbourhood,
whether they ran into him at a local coffee shop or passed by him on the
street. A server at Garage, a local
restaurant on Church Street, remembers seeing McArthur several times in the
summer seated on the patio. He seemed harmless enough to him. He just looks
like a friendly old man. He and the
others in that gay village connected the missing men with McArthur.
“The scary part, is that
literally the person beside you could be a killer,” said a man at Woody’s who
was sipping a white wine at the bar. “You just don’t even know anymore.”
Years before McArthur was named as
an alleged serial killer, Bruce McArthur was brought in by police to a police
station for questioning in a separate incident unrelated to men missing from
Toronto's Gay Village and was let go, according to sources familiar with the
incident.
McArthur, who later was charged
with six more counts of first-degree murder, after the 2014 closure of a police
investigation dubbed Project Houston,
which investigated three missing persons, and before the 2017 launch of Project Prism, which culminated in
McArthur's January 2018 arrest,
Homicide detectives while probing
McArthur's case did not find out that the police had previously questioned
McArthur until after his arrest. These investigators then passed this
information to the Toronto police professional standards unit and an internal
investigation began recently. From what I learned, a man approached and officer
stating that McArthur tried to strangle him but the officer didn’t take the
complaint seriously. At the time of the writing of this article, that officer
is going to appear before a police tribunal to explain why he came to that
stupid conclusion hat nothing was wrong. When I learn that the decisions is, I will
place it at the end of this article as an UPDATE.
Years ago a semi-naked man ran towards a police officer in a
city street in the USA and said that the man chasing him tried to kill him. The
serial killer told the officer that the young man was drunk and he would take
him back home and sober him up. The officer went with them to the apartment and
since everything looked OK in the apartment, he left the two men alone in the apartment. If he had searched in the
refrigerator, he would have seen the head of a victim the serial killer had
killed earlier. The serial killer murdered the young man soon after the officer
left the apartment.
The Toronto police
discovered dismembered skeletal remains in backyard planters. What happened to
the victim’s flesh?
There may be more victims killed by McArthur but only the remains of
eight of them were found by the police. The remains of the victims were those
of Selim
Esen, Abdulbasir Faizi, Kirushna Kumar Kanagaratnam, Majeed Kayhan, Dean
Lisowick, Soroush Mahmudi and Skandaraj Navaratnam.
It was the Toronto police allegation
that a serial killer was responsible for the gruesome murders that had prompted
at least one homicide expert to suggest the perpetrator was likely a
psychopath. Criminologist and former police officer Michael Arntfield said the
revelations suggest that the victims’ bodies were moved and hidden. It’s a
relatively rare tactic “strongly co-related with offenders who are in the
psychopathic spectrum.” He made this statement as opposed to those murderers
suffering from a mental health issue or acting spontaneously out of anger or
under the influence of a narcotic.
Arntfield, who is also a
professor at Western University in London, Ontario also said, “These are people
who have fantasized about this for some time, who put considerable mental and
physical energy into scouting and identifying locations, preparing for any
contingency.”
I studied Abnormal Psychology for nine months at the University of
Toronto as part of a five-year criminology program. I was also a group
counsellor in a detention centre for several years and conducted group sessions
with some of the inmates who were killers. This doesn’t make me an expert on
this subject but I have some understanding of the minds of killers so I will
give you my thoughts about psychopaths.
Psychopaths are unabashed in their
actions against others, whether it is defrauding someone of their life savings,
manipulating law enforcement personnel during an interrogation, by blaming
their victims for their crimes and or killing human beings. They have no
empathy towards other human beings. In other words, they care less about the
feelings of others.
This is particularly true in cases
involving psychopathic killers. When psychopaths commit a homicide, their
killings likely will be planned and purposeful—that is, organized, and not
committed in the heat of passion. The motive of a psychopathic killer will
often involve either power and control or sadistic gratification. Yes,
psychopathic killers enjoy the feelings they get when they murder their
victims.
When faced with overwhelming
evidence of their guilt, a psychopathic killer such as
Ted Bundy will often claim they lost control or were in a fit of rage
when committing
the act of murder. In reality, however, their killings are stone-cold,
calculated, and completely premeditated. Where Bundy and McArthur were
both psychopathic killers and both confessed to their crimes.
Incidentally, Bundy and I had one thing in common. We both sat in the
electric chair in the death house in Florida. He was executed and I was given a
personal tour of the prison where the electric chair is located.
Just as sociopaths are a
special breed, so too are their victims. What was it about these victims
that made them seem vulnerable? A later study found that the men were picking
up on whole suite of nonverbal cues, including the length of their stride, how
they shifted their weight, and how high they lifted their feet. Taken together,
these cues gave the psychopathic men a rough gauge of how confident their
potential victims were. Body language that implies a lack of confidence read: socially submissive that includes lack of eye contact,
fidgeting of the hands and feet, and the avoidance of large gestures when
shifting posture.
The women who wound up on the
receiving end of Bundy’s attentions
were individuals who, were not very worldly, experienced, or outgoing. They were psychologically vulnerable and hence ill-equipped
to resist this killer’s predations. And so the psychopath continues on his way
after he murders them.
McArthur wasn’t interested in having sex with the lesbian women in Gay
Village. He was more interested in having sx with the gay men. Thank God he
wasn’t a pedophile.
The audacious act by McArthur of stashing remains in private yards would
be immensely alluring to this killer by offering him a sense of “immeasurable
power” to secretly wield over city officials and victims’ family members.
Serial
killers get a thrill when they know things other people don’t know. The thrill
for them is revisiting these scenes knowing something that the police and
society don’t know even exists. I don’t know where McArthur murdered his
victims but he knew where he placed their remains and since they were on the
properties of his customers and he would return to those places often, he must
have gotten quite a thrill when he saw the flower planters where he placed the
remains of his victims.
Of course, as soon as the police were told by one of McArthur’s
customers that human remains were found in a flower planter, the locations of
the others victims were easy to determine.
It’s difficult to get rid of bodies. How do you do it in a place like
Toronto? You don’t have access to heavy machinery and can’t bury them 30 feet
underground. The planters were ideal for a landscaper like McArthur. But where
did he dismember the bodies of his victims. Was it in his van? Was it a thrill for him when he cut up the bodies? We will never know unless he agrees to discuss
his crimes to a psychiatrist while he is in prison and the psychiatrist’s
report eventually becomes public.
The 2012
FBI report states that 15-20
percent of the two million+ prisoners in the U.S., which are 90 percent male, are psychopaths.
I sense that there is some type of trepidation in killer’s lives where
they think that they’re going to be caught, whereas other killers are arrogant
and very confident in themselves I have no idea if McArthur was seriously
concerned that he would be caught but I suspect that after a while, he was less
in fear that he would be caught since he had placed the victim’s remains in his
customer’s flower urns and generally, they are rarely if ever emptied. But then one day…..
Justice John McMahon told the court while delivering his sentence. “I am
satisfied, beyond a reasonable doubt, that these men died a slow and painful
death by ligature strangulation for the sexual gratification of Mr. McArthur. All or most of
the victims were vulnerable individuals who were lured to their deaths, no doubt
on the promise of consensual sexual activity. The accused exploited his
victims’ vulnerabilities, whether they involved immigration concerns, mental
health challenges or people living a secretive double life.”
Justice McMahon sentenced McArthur to life in prison for each of the
eight counts. He said that McArthur won’t have consecutive periods of parole
ineligibility that the crown had asked for with respect to two of the
deaths.
At age 67, McArthur will be eligible to be released from prison in in
2044 when he is 91 years of age.
Strange enough, that sentence may seem odd considering the fact that he
confessed to murdering eight men. In Canada, when a persons kills more than one
person after the year 2011, the sentences will be consecutive. However, the judge added that McArthur is
suffering from diabetes and may actually die in prison before his 25-yer
sentence is over. Further, he said that it is highly unlikely that the National
Parole board will ever grant him parole. However, there have been many
instances were parolees have continued committing the same crimes again.
Despite that possibility, how successful would a 91 year old man be in trying
to strangle a younger man if he was released from prison?
Serial killer Clifford Olsen killed ten young persons in the Province of
British Columbia and was sentenced to twenty-five years. When the twenty-five
years were completed, the National Parole Board refused to release him. The
killer eventually died in prison.
When is Canada’s next
unknown serial killer going to do his dirty deeds? There are millions of people
in Canada and they are obviously completely unaware of what the future holds
for them. Unfortunately for some them, a serial killer will kill them and each
of their families and friends will
suffer from their loss of the victims.
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