Cory Fenn Found Guilty Of 3 Murders

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Cory Fenn has been found guilty of the murders of a mother and her two children. According to court documents Cory Fenn was mad that Krassimira Pejcinovski had broken up with him and Fenn responded violently. Cory Fenn would fatally stab Krassimira Pejcinovski and her 13 year old daughter Venellia before strangling to death her 14 year old son Roy. Cory Fenn tried to blame the triple murder on a five day cocaine binge however the jury was not buying it. Cory Fenn is now due for sentencing where he will face a minimum of twenty five years to life in prison

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 An Ontario man has been found guilty of three counts of second-degree murder in the deaths of a woman and two of her children east of Toronto, with the presiding judge calling the attacks “vicious and brutal.”

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Cory Fenn had pleaded not guilty to three counts of second-degree murder for the deaths of 39-year-old Krassimira Pejcinovski, her 13-year-old daughter, Venellia, and her 14-year-old son, Roy.

Justice Howard Leibowich did not buy Fenn’s argument that he was in a state of psychosis at the time brought on by a five-day cocaine binge.

“Vicious and brutal are some of the descriptors I can use to describe the attacks,” Leibowich told court in his ruling on Thursday.

The prosecution had said Fenn killed all three in a rage on March 14, 2018, in Ajax, Ont., after Krassimira Pejcinovski broke up with him. The mother and her daughter were found stabbed to death, while the boy was strangled.

Fenn argued he did not have the mental ability to commit the crimes, but did not call a defence.

A court-appointed lawyer assisting Fenn said the man killed all three, but argued he did not have the requisite state of mind to commit murder due to his extensive use of cocaine, rendering him in a psychotic state at the time.

Court heard that Fenn and Pejcinovski had an on-again, off-again relationship while Fenn lived in the basement of Pejcinovski’s home.

“Mr. Fenn and Krissy were involved in an unhealthy, toxic relationship,” Liebowich said.

The Crown said Pejcinovski’s oldest daughter, Victoria, who was 16 at the time, had found cocaine on the stove the day before the deaths. She confronted her mother and told her Fenn had to go, she testified. Krassimira Pejcinovski agreed and said she would break up with Fenn.

Pejcinovski spent much of that night in the basement with Fenn, which she often did in the past, court heard, the pair snorting cocaine together.

Her oldest daughter left around 9:30 p.m. to go to her father’s home and told court she became worried when her mother failed to pick her up for a driving lesson the following morning.

When her mother failed to respond to text messages, she called her younger sister, who was in her bedroom with her friend for a sleepover, court heard. Vana, as she was known, left the room to go check on her mom, court heard.

Shortly after that, the Crown said, Fenn attacked the girl, leaving her eyes blackened, stabbed her with a butter knife and stuffed her body under a bed.

The friend who was in the home for the sleepover testified she heard Fenn coming up the stairs, breathing heavily. He asked her where Victoria was, before turning around returning downstairs, leaving her unharmed

Shortly afterward, Krissy Pejcinovski’s boss showed up, worried after her employee had failed to show up to work.

Sherry Robinson testified she noticed blood on Fenn’s arms and foot. She left, drove down the street and called police.

Fenn took off in his car, which he later ditched at a gas station, and went to an ex’s place. Police found him later that day hiding in a shed.

Pejcinovski suffered multiple fractures to her skull and jaw, had 17 fractured ribs and extensive bruising across her face, neck, torso and limbs, court heard. When she kept breathing after an attempted strangulation in the garage, Fenn left to grab a knife and returned.

The judge said he did know the reason of Fenn’s attack on Pejcinovski, but that the motive did not matter.

“Mr. Fenn had the state of mind that when his initial method was not accomplishing his goal, he went to get a knife to finish the job,” the judge said.

The judge found that Fenn had killed Pejcinovski and Roy by 5 a.m.

Fenn said he never would have done it if he wasn’t high on cocaine, court heard.

In closing arguments in late October, Cory Fenn said he was like “the walking dead” at the time of the killings.

“The mental element was not there,” he said. “It’s like the Wizard of Oz going down the path, ‘if I only had a brain’ — I didn’t have one, guys.”

Corey Fenn Now

Corey Fenn is currently awaiting sentencing

Bruce McArthur Toronto Serial Killer

bruce mcarthur serial killer

Bruce McArthur is a Canadian serial killer who operated in the Toronto Ontario area from 2010 to 2017. The Toronto Police Department took a pretty big hit from newspapers as many believed he could have been stopped much earlier but because of the bias against the gay community there concerns were not taken seriously. In this article on My Crime Library we are going to take a closer look at serial killer Bruce McArthur.

Bruce McArthur Early Life

Bruce McArthur was born Thomas Donald Bruce McArthur in Lindsay Ontario on October 8, 1951. McArthur grew up on a farm where his parents would take in troubled kids from Toronto. McArthur who attended school in a one room schoolhouse was described by fellow students as a teacher’s pet. Bruce McArthur would later express his true sexual identity would start to appear but he kept it hidden due to society views of homosexuality at the time. Bruce McArthur would marry Janice Campbell when they were both 23

Bruce McArthur would work at a major department store in downtown Toronto that was slowly becoming a gay village. McArthur parents would die in 1978 and in 1981

Bruce McArthur and his wife would buy a home in Oshawa where they would have two children. The marriage would end in 1997 and Bruce McArthur would move back to Toronto as there was more of a gay community.

Bruce McArthur Crimes

In 2001 Bruce McArthur would physically assault another man inside of the man’s apartment. Bruce McArthur would turn himself over to police and told officers he was not sure of why he attacked the man. McArthur would be convicted of assault and sentenced to two years less a day ( In Canada two years less a day is a provincial sentence whereas anything two years and over is a Federal sentence – for my US Friends think State and Federal). However McArthur would serve the sentence at home under house arrest for the first year. In 2014 Bruce McArthur would have his record expunged.

Bruce McArthur Murders

Bruce McArthur would murder at least eight men between the years of 2010 to 2015

bruce mcarthur victims
Top row (left to right) are Selim Esen, Soroush Mahmudi, Dean Lisowick and Abdulbasir Faizi. Bottom row (left to right) are Skandaraj Navaratnam, Andrew Kinsman, Kirushna Kanagaratnam and Majeed Kayhan.

Skandaraj “Skanda” Navaratnam – Reported missing September 6, 2010

Abdulbasir “Basir” Faizi – Reported missing December 28, 2010

Majeed “Hamid” Kayhan – Reported missing October 18, 2012

Kirushna Kumar Kanagaratnam – Reported missing Aug 2015

Soroush Mahmudi – Reported missing Aug 15, 2015

Dean Lisowick – Reported missing April 21, 2016

Selim Esen – Reported missing March 20, 2017

Andrew Kinsman – June 26, 2017

Bruce McArthur would ultimately plead guilty to the murders of eight men and would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole

Bruce McArthur Videos

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Bruce McArthur is unlikely to harm another person from behind the bars of his tiny cell in Millhaven. Ever.

The rotund landscaping ghoul and former travelling sock salesman is reportedly in failing health and death may come sooner than later.

But the convicted serial killer whose murderous jag came to an abrupt end in a Toronto courtroom a hair more than a year ago left a slew of loose ends.

For starters, no one believes McArthur, 68, started killing gay men when he was 56-years-old. A mountain of evidence says this is nearly impossible.

Pinning more murders on the corpulent killer, that’s another matter.

“Other than if you believe he’s responsible for the gay strip murders in the 1970s… and many people do… there’s this huge gap in his life from the late 1970s to when he came out of the closet in the early 1990s,” said cold case expert Michael Arntfield, a professor at Western University.

“You have to remember, he was doing his killing carefully, successfully. That didn’t happen over night.”

But Arntfield added that tying other homicides to McArthur may be akin to “finding a needle in a haystack.” An unenviable job for cops.

“If there’s no body, there’s no crime scene,” he said.

The only hope to bring closure to families whose loved ones have been missing or whose cases have gone unsolved for decades is if it turns out McArthur was involved and that he “does a Samuel Little” and starts talking. Maybe for his conscience. Maybe for his family.

Samuel Little is the elderly American serial killer who met a Texas Ranger he liked last year and started talking. And talking. And talking.

So far, he has copped to 93 murders of women across the U.S. with such detail, his drawings of the victims have helped cops identify the dead. He is the worst serial killer in American history.

“That’s 93 confessions on murders that never would have been solved unless he provided the dates and locations … Police would have had no ability to tie them all together without his cooperation,” Arntfield said.

In McArthur’s stomping grounds where he peddled socks for years, just two men fit the bill, including a confirmed homicide victim.

On Oct. 21, 1989, a man’s body was found in an isolated area near Napanee in eastern Ontario, north of Hwy. 401.

The South Asian victim had been gagged and his hands were bound. He had been strangled to death.

He was between 35 and 55-years-old with a  slight build.

All Bruce McArthur markers.

In a bitter twist, the victim wore and “evil eye” pendant on a gold chain around his neck. It failed spectacularly in warding off evil.

A second possibility is the mysterious death of Ottawa-area teen Shafiq Vikram who vanished in 1994. His body wasn’t discovered until 2016

Arntfield remains skeptical whether the Napanee murder or other potential McArthur homicides will ever be solved, saying “there’s not a lot to go on.”

https://torontosun.com/news/local-news/hunter-how-many-did-bruce-mcarthur-really-kill

Bruce McArthur Release Date

Bruce McArthur is serving a life sentence

Bruce McArthur Now

Bruce McArthur is incarcerated at Millhaven Prison in Ontario, Canada

How Many People Did Bruce McArthur Murder

Bruce McArthur was convicted of eight murders

Gerry Charlebois 78 Arrested For Honking Horn At Freedom Convoy

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Gerry Charlebois a 78 year old Great Grandfather from Ottawa Canada was arrested for honking his horn at the Freedom Convoy that is currently occupying Canada’s Capital City. According to police reports Gerry Charlebois was showing support to the Freedom Convoy and would honk his vehicle’s horn and gave a thumbs up sign however this has now been declared illegal. The four foot ten Gerry Charlebois  was rather violently taken to the ground by Ottawa police as Freedom Convoy members yelled an assortment of abuses toward the police officer for the way they were dealing with Gerry Charlebois. In the end Gerry Charlebois ended up with a $110 fine and Ottawa Police have yet another incident they will have to explain. Make Sure To Check Out The Video Below

Gerry Charlebois Videos

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The 78-year-old great-grandfather arrested and handcuffed by Ottawa Police after honking his horn in support for a protesting trucker said he was not a protester and was not looking for any trouble.

“I meant no harm,” Gerry Charlebois told the Toronto Sun in an interview. “I just gave the trucker a thumbs-up and a honk.”

At the same time as concerns over honking in the city reached a fever pitch, Ottawa Police pulled over an elderly, retired Ottawa-area high school janitor.

He was not charged criminally but given a $118 bylaw ticket for “unnecessary noise.” But he did receive a physical takedown he won’t soon forget.

“I’m so sore,” said the father of four children, grandfather of 11 and great-grandfather of four. “It hurts so much.”

The cuts and bruises on his arms and hands, shoulder and knee are evident. A shade of black and blue is more evident Tuesday, his family say.

Video footage of Sunday’s disturbing arrest, and agitators yelling at police during the incident, is being shared around the world.

Charlebois, who is double vaccinated and planning to get his booster shot, said he was “confused” during the incident at the corner of Besserer and Friel Sts., about four blocks from the main protest.

“I was in shock,” Charlebois said. “When (the police) pulled me over, he told me I was in trouble for honking the horn.”

While the video shows he cussed at the officer, Charlebois said he respects police “but I was just upset with him.” He said he had never before been arrested or on the wrong side of police.

“Never,” he said. “He just pissed me off when he said that about the honking. It upset me.”

Things deteriorated from there.

After attempting to get his identification from his wallet in the back of his minivan, Charlebois was taken down with the twisting of his arm and hand, and landed on one knee on the ground before being pressed against his van and then, with the help of a second officer, handcuffed behind his back.

His family is horrified.

“He’s just 4 foot 10,” his son Steve said. “He wouldn’t hurt anybody.”

His sons can’t understand why, with all of the rhetoric about it being a fringe minority from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, it was their father who ended up being the one scapegoated.

“They didn’t seem to arrest any of those big truckers like that,” another son, Gerald, said.

The size and age difference with the much younger and larger officer further angered both Gerald and Steve.

“I find it disgusting,” Gerald said. “There was no need to be so rough with him.”

With a “very messed-up shoulder” and having difficult moving his arm, Steve said of his dad: “We may have to take him to the hospital for an X-ray.”

On Tuesday morning, Gerald said he was “more sore today than yesterday.”

Neither Ottawa Police nor Mayor Jim Watson have commented so far

Charlebois said he just drove into the area to take a look at the trucks and was planning on getting out of his van and walking to Parliament Hill.

“That’s why I put my wallet in the back of the van,” he said. “I was hoping to go in there, but when I got there I saw all of the commotion. I decided it was too much so I just looked from the van and then started to head home.”

Now he wonders if it would have been better if he had not gone to the protest zone instead.

However, the history is written. This was a senior citizen born in 1943, forcefully arrested and ticketed for unnecessary noise after honking his horn in support of a trucker.

https://torontosun.com/news/provincial/warmington-arrested-78-year-old-great-grandfather-meant-no-harm-by-honking

Jack Sepple Charged In Ashley Wadsworth Murder

Jack Sepple ashley wadsworth murder

Jack Sepple has been charged with the murder of Ashley Wadsworth in Chelmsford England. According to court documents Jack Sepple and Ashley Wadsworth met online and eventually the Canadian born woman would move across the ocean to be with her accused killer. According to reports Jack Sepple would fatally stab Ashley Wadsworth. Now Jack Sepple has been arrested and made his initial appearance in court today where he is facing murder charges. Needless to say the brutal murder is stirring up feelings both in Vernon British Columbia Canada and in Britain

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A Vernon woman has been identified as the victim of a fatal stabbing in the U.K.

According to Essex Police, officers responded to a Chelmsford home Tuesday, Feb. 1, shortly after 4 p.m. local time.

Despite efforts by paramedics, 19-year-old Ashley Wadsworth died.

Jack Sepple, 23, of Chelmsford, Essex, appeared in court today, Feb. 3, for his first appearance on one count of murder.

“I know that incidents like this will shock and sadden the community, but our initial enquiries show this to be an isolated incident and that there is no wider risk to the community,” investigator Scott Egerton with the Essex Police said in a statement.

Reports from the U.K. suggest that the pair were in a relationship.

Jack Seeple Other News

A man has appeared in court charged with murdering his 19-year-old Canadian girlfriend, as her friends paid tribute to “a beautiful soul”.

Jack Sepple, 23, is accused of killing Ashley Wadsworth at a property in Chelmsford on Tuesday. Essex police attended the address in Tennyson Road shortly after 4pm.

Despite the efforts of paramedics, the teenager was pronounced dead at the scene. Ashley was originally from Vernon, British Columbia, and the couple met through an online dating app.

Her Facebook profile said she moved to Chelmsford in November 2021. Earlier this year she posted photos of her “amazing trip to London” where she went sightseeing.

Friends paid tribute to her, with one woman writing on social media: “My heart aches to hear this tragic news. The last time we talked we were planning to hangout right?

“Ashley was one of my best friends that I’ve met here in Canada. We lost a beautiful soul.”

Another said: “Rest In Peace sweet girl. I remember the most beautiful, brightest; most special moments watching you grow up. I will cherish them forever.”

A third wrote: “I hope heaven is everything you read about in church and more. And Ashley just know, I love you. I promise I will do my best to take care of your family for you. Till we meet again.”

Sepple, of Tennyson Road, Chelmsford, appeared at Colchester magistrates’ court on Thursday to face one count of murder.

He was remanded into custody and will next appear at Chelmsford crown court on Friday.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/feb/03/chelmsford-man-charged-with-of-his-canadian-girlfriend

Jack Seeple Videos

Elizabeth Wettlaufer Serial Killer

Elizabeth Wettlaufer serial killer

Elizabeth Wettlaufer is in a unique club as she is one of the very few female serial killers in Canadian history. Elizabeth Wettlaufer was a nurse who was responsible for the murders of eight people and the attempted murders of at least six more. In this article we will take a closer look at Elizabeth Wettlaufer.

Elizabeth Wettlaufer Early Years

Elizabeth Wettlaufer was born near Woodstock Ontario in a Baptist household. She would receive a degree in Religious Education Counseling before studying nursing

Elizabeth Wettlaufer Nursing Career

Elizabeth Wettlaufer would begin her nursing career in 2007 and for the most part was thought of as competent by fellow staff members however that would change when she began to experience problems with drugs and alcohol. She would be suspended on a number of occasions over the next seven years until she was finally fired for giving the wrong medication to a patient in 2014.

Elizabeth Wettlaufer would be employed for a number of temporary agencies until she finally went to a drug rehabilitation.

Elizabeth Wettlaufer Confession To Murder

While Elizabeth Wettlaufer was at the drug rehabilitation center she would make a confession to a staff member on how she had killed a number of her patients. The staff member would report the confession to police and once she was arrested Elizabeth Wettlaufer would make a full confession to the murders of eight senior citizens and the attempted murders of six more starting in 2007.

Elizabeth Wettlaufer would tell police that she would inject insulin into the patients

Elizabeth Wettlaufer would plead guilty to eight murders in court and would be sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

Elizabeth Wettlaufer More News

Elizabeth Wettlaufer, Canada’s only known health care serial killer, wouldn’t have been caught if she hadn’t confessed.

That was one of the principal findings of a commission of inquiry into the deaths of seniors under Wettlaufer’s care in long-term care homes in southwestern Ontario.

Over the course of nine years ending in 2016, Wettlaufer, a registered nurse, killed eight and attempted to kill others by injecting her victims with insulin.

They were not mercy killings, Commissioner Eileen E. Gillese wrote in her final report, released Wednesday. Wettlaufer killed “for her own gratification and for no other reason.”

The commissioner said that in the report she had “no hesitation” in finding that Wettlaufer’s offences wouldn’t have been discovered if she hadn’t turned herself in.

The finding is important, she wrote, because without systemic changes — the report contained 91 recommendations — similar tragedies could go undetected in the Canadian healthcare system.

Wettlaufer is serving a life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years after her 2017 conviction on eight counts of first-degree murder, four counts of attempted murder and two counts of aggravated assault.

Wettlaufer was the catalyst for her own prosecution. In 2016, she quit her job and checked into Toronto’s Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. She admitted to a psychiatrist, and later police, that she had killed and hurt patients.

Until that point, she hadn’t even been under investigation, despite having hurt or killed 14 seniors.

“The evidence showed that no one suspected that Wettlaufer was intentionally harming those under her care — not the residents or their families, not those who worked alongside Wettlaufer, and not those who managed and supervised her,” the commissioner wrote.

Further, Wettlaufer also faced indirect oversight from the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, which inspected the facilities she worked at, and as well as from coroners who investigated some of the seniors’ deaths.

In 2014, she had been fired from Caressant Care in Woodstock, Ont., in part for medication errors.

The College of Nurses of Ontario kept Wettlaufer’s termination notice on file, but, the licensing body took no action to suggest it had “serious concerns” about the care Wettlaufer had provided, Gillese found.

At a press conference on Wednesday, Gillese said that one of the clear lessons of the inquiry is that crimes can go undetected when the possibility that healthcare workers might cause intentional harm goes unrecognized.

“We have to improve awareness that this is an actual threat,” she said.

One of the report’s recommendations is that the government of Ontario ensure that a strategic plan is in place to build awareness of the healthcare serial killer phenomenon.

Wettlaufer herself told lawyers with the inquiry that she chose insulin because it wouldn’t be missed — the drug isn’t tracked as closely as, say, a narcotic.

But her use of the drug also aided in Wetlauffer’s crimes going undetected from a scientific standpoint, the commissioner concluded.

Even in cases where an autopsy is performed, it’s not easy to identify if someone has died due to an insulin overdose, according to the province’s chief forensic pathologist.

Dr. Michael Pollanen, who testified at the inquiry and the criminal trial, gave several reasons for this.

For one, there’s no post-mortem test for low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), and the symptoms are associated with other conditions. There are also “serious practical challenges” to identifying that hypoglycemia, if present, was caused by insulin, Gillese wrote.

When someone dies, it’s also difficult to distinguish natural and synthetic insulin in the body, the report stated.

As well, deaths from an insulin overdose could take days to occur.

Another reason why Gillese found that Wettlaufer’s confession was the only means by which she would have been caught is that the judge who presided over the criminal case drew the same conclusion.

In his sentencing decision on June 26, 2017, Justice Bruce Thomas acknowledged what he called Wettlaufer’s “free run” on her nine-year killing spree, with no oversight or even an inkling she had been killing patients.

“Without her confessions, I am convinced these offences would never have been brought to justice,” he said, calling Wettlaufer a “shadow of death that passed over them (the victims) on the night shift where she supervised.”