I recently bumped into this case on Youtube. It is for sure a very interesting one, and like hell it is disturbing, as I am around the same age with those boys, and the year the "event" occured - I quote Kruse here -, I was hopelessly in love with a guy, who looked exactly like Kruse. And yeah... It could have been me. Or not?
So what exactly happened? Why did she have to die?
I kept investigating this case as this is one of those, that keeps me restless even at night. Staring at the ceiling and overthinking it instead of her. I just finished reading the text between Cam and Kim and I read her texts with Kruse yesterday. I looked at it from Kim's perspective, and analysed it with my own understanding. And this is a heavily subjective outcome, and it's only relying on publicly released data, but you can read my analisys at the end, separated from facts.

Langford, British Columbia
Popular with young families and working professionals due to affordable housing and access to nature. Recognized as one of the fastest-growing cities in Canada, and named Best Community in BC by Maclean’s Magazine.
Kimberly Proctor was born on January 1, 1992. Her middle-class parents—Lucy, a Walmart manager, and Fred—a diesel mechanic. Kim had a passion for animals, raising lizards, rabbits, mice, and hamsters. She loved cats so much that, when she was young, she wore cat ears to school.
Kim was an ernest person, had struggles if a lot of people was around her. In her ealry years, she was bullied in School. As mum said she was always bullied.
The school attracted a variety of troubled kids in Langford, a sleepy suburb of Victoria, but few more troubled than Kruse Wellwood. Kruse was a killer’s son. In 2001, following his involvement in a sexual-assault case, Kruse’s father, Robert Raymond Dezwaan, sexually assaulted and murdered a 16-year-old girl. Dezwaan was sentenced to life with no possibility of parole for 15 years. Kruse later said he clearly understood what his father had done, but he seldom discussed it. Kruse had been involved in a variety of incidents—from smoking pot to stealing money from mailboxes—by the time he was 16.
Kruse and Cam met in fifth-grade art class when they bonded over their mutual disdain of a teacher. While Kruse was wiry and intelligent, Cam was a hulking slow learner who suffered from A.D.H.D. A psychiatric report later revealed that Cam had been sexually abused at age four (although it was not publicly revealed by whom). As a child, Cam began jumping out his bedroom window at night until it was barred. Cam resisted counseling and meds. He began lashing out at home and cutting himself to relieve stress. He was increasingly menacing at school too, bringing a knife to class.
Kruse was the one kid who seemed to understand him. “[He] might as well be my brother,” Cam later said. They skipped school, smoked pot, played World of Warcraft, and surfed porn sites, but, despite frequent acting out, were never perceived as a serious threat. In February 2009, Kruse posted an entry on a WordPress blog entitled, “Early Warning Signs of a Serial Killer.” He listed common traits including animal abuse, fascination with fire, abandonment by a father, and an intense interest in sadomasochistic porn. “The peculier thing is I meet all fourteen criteria” of a serial killer, he blogged. “Apparently though meeting all criteria makes it unlikely for the subject to be a serial killer. I suppose only time will tell.”

By 2009, Kim, Kruse, and Cam had become part of the same small group at Pacific Secondary. The teens in Langford enjoyed a great degree of independence, cruising the double-decker buses, heading to the Westshore Town Centre mall, or getting stoned on the rambling Galloping Goose Trail. At night they continued the party into the wee hours online, chatting and flirting.
For a while, Kim dated Zach, another member of the group, who was particularly friendly with Kruse. But, like many high-school romances, Kim’s affair with Zach was short-lived—he called it off after a few months. Kim was crushed and sought out the solace of her friends, including Cam and Kruse, online. During one of these chats, Cam confessed to Kim that he liked her. He complimented her beauty, telling her: “There arnt meny beautiful things iv seen, but i must say you are one of them.”
“Aww thanx :),” she replied.
But Kim was more interested in Kruse. The two had become close during her painful split from Zach, texting and chatting. Since Kruse was still close with Zach, Kim told her friend Samantha Kennedy that dating him seemed like a way to lessen the pain of losing Zach. “Make sure if you don’t like him that you don’t lead him on,” Samantha advised.
During one chat, Kruse told Kim he felt more open around her than other people. “I can’t lie to you,” he wrote. “It makes me feel too guilty. Normally I can. . . . You make me feel very . . . honest for some reason.” Kim replied with a laugh and a confused emoticon. “Ha ha . . ,” she wrote, “thanx i guess: S.”
Online, they began sharing the insecurities that they couldn’t in person. Kim told Kruse she still felt short and pudgy. “You’re beautiful the way you are,” he reassured her. When Kim tried to joke about Kruse’s old school-yard nickname, the Spaz, he said the wounds ran deeper than she thought. “It wasn’t a nickname it was an insult,” he explained. “I had huge people issues. I still do but now I know how people work and [what] makes them tick so It’s easy enough to put on a mask and play pretend.” When Kruse wrote of being “violent and explosive,” she replied with an “lol.”
“You’re too good Kim,” he wrote to her one day, “you trust in people too much.”
Kruse’s and Cam’s lives were growing increasingly dark. They were often high. They experimented with drinking blood and bodily fluids. Friends reported hearing Cam screaming at his family at home, and Kruse, still living alone with his mother, was resistant to any supervision at all.
They visited sadistic porn sites, and in their frequent chats with each other online, they began fantasizing about rape and bondage.

That morning, Kim was still in bed when her mother kissed her good-bye before going to work, and told her she loved her. They had reason to be happy. The day before, Kim had found out she had enough credits to graduate from high school, and she was looking forward to hopefully volunteering at the local wild-animal-rehabilitation center, Wild arc.
That day, Kim didn’t have classes, so her mother figured she’d sleep in. The plan was for her to babysit in the afternoon, then come home to start sewing her graduation dress. But Kim had one last thing to resolve first. After her mother had gone, she slipped on her black hoodie with the number 13 on the front, and headed for the Langford bus exchange.
Around 10:30 a.m., Kim got off at the exchange, where Kruse and Cam met her. Cam had just finished buying the camp fuel that the boys would later use to set Kim’s body on fire. The three of them chatted for a bit, and then went down to the small brown house on Happy Valley Road with a strand of lights strung along the trim.
In the early hours of that morning, Kruse had told Cam he’d use a code phrase—“I think I’m going to make some KD”—a Canadian abbreviation for Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Dinner—when he was ready to attack. Shortly after arriving at the house, the boys struck, kicking and hitting Kim as they bound her hands and ankles. Kruse stuffed a sock in Kim’s mouth, which he then wrapped in duct tape. The two raped and beat Kim for hours until she died from suffocation. They mutilated her with a knife and stuffed refuse, including a four-inch-long lollipop stick, into her vagina and anus. They moved her body to a freezer in Kruse’s garage.
At some point, possibly while Kim was still alive, Kruse sat at his computer and sent her one last instant message—his alibi, he thought—asking her if she was done babysitting yet. Inevitably, other messages popped up when Kruse’s handle appeared online. A friend IM’d him that he suspected his father had been drinking rubbing alcohol. The friend wanted Kruse’s advice but grew frustrated when Kruse didn’t reply. “Dude,” he typed, “speeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaak.”
Eight minutes later Kruse replied. “Sorry,” he wrote, “the freezer was jumping around.” Later that evening, Cam texted an ex-girlfriend, encouraging her to sneak out of her house and join him at Kruse’s. She didn’t come, though.
The next morning, Kruse and Cam put Kim’s body into a hockey bag and boarded a bus for the Galloping Goose Trail. Once there, they trudged into the woods and under a bridge. They doused the bag in fuel and lit it on fire. At some point while they were there, Kruse got out his phone and sent a text.
Prior to this, Kruse hadn’t tried hard to cover his tracks. But, as he later told the girl from Halifax, sending that text from under the bridge might have been a crucial mistake. He wondered if the police could trace his text to his phone at this spot. What if his digital trail led them to Galloping Goose?
:’(:’(:’(:’( OMFG I AM SO UPSET YM BESTFRIEND IS MISSING KIM IF U SEE THIS PLZZZZZZ EMAIL ME TELLING ME THAT YOUR OK I WILL NEVER STOP BEING FRIENDS WITH YOU KIM I MISS U PLZZ EMAIL ME TO TELL ME THTA UR OK!!!!!!:”(:’(:’’’’’’:’( KIMMY I MISS YOU AND I LOVE U !!!!!!!!
Samantha Kennedy, Kim’s friend, posted this message on her Facebook page not long after Lucy Proctor reported Kim missing. Kim's mother had suspected trouble the moment she called her on Thursday afternoon and was diverted straight to voicemail. “Because the phone was turned off I knew that something was wrong,” she told the police.
As the family, friends, and police mounted a search for Kim, Cam and Kruse went on with their lives. After dumping Kim’s body, Kruse spent the rest of the day at home with a girl he had been dating. Cam had brunch with his grandmother and mother, who took him to buy a video game afterward.
That night, around seven p.m., a young male who had been smoking pot with his friends under the Galloping Goose bridge stumbled across charred human remains. Dental records soon confirmed that the body was Kim’s. The Vancouver Island Major Crime Unit and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police dispatched an investigative team of more than 40 officers on the murder case.
For cases involving teens, the online world is “more valuable than ever,” says Corporal Darren Lagan, spokesperson for the British Columbia Island District R.C.M.P. “People tend to be freer online, especially young people—they don’t feel any repercussions or anyone watching. It’s like when we used to try to get a booth in a coffee shop next to a person we were surveilling. We don’t have to do that anymore.”
Investigators kept close watch as Kim’s friends and family took to Facebook, including setting up a public memorial page in her honor. Visitors began trading clues and theories about who might have killed her. Investigators closely monitored this page, culling potential witnesses there as well as on other publicly available Facebook pages—none of which necessitated a warrant. (“You’d be amazed at how many people don’t have a single privacy [setting] on there,” Lagan said.)
With Kim’s death consuming the town and the local news, Kruse became increasingly paranoid about leaving any more evidence online. But he couldn’t resist the urge to share his story with someone he trusted. He was afraid of using MSN, but he thought the chat logs in World of Warcraft were less likely to be saved. On March 23, five days after Kim’s murder, he told his gamer girlfriend in Halifax on MSN that he had something urgent to tell her, but that he wanted to do it over World of Warcraft chat instead. Once inside World of Warcraft, he confessed to the crime. Back on MSN, he sent her links to the news reports as backup. The girl was shocked, but she eventually replied in the way he no doubt expected. “I’ll always be here, no matter what you do,” she wrote.
“That’s why I told you,” Kruse said. “No matter how things turn out I’ll make it up to you somehow, oneday.”
According to what the Halifax girlfriend told police, Cam came onto World of Warcraft chat, confirming Kruse’s account.
“What about her family and her friends and all whose lives you have ruined?” the girl asked Cam.
“No, I don’t feel bad for them,” he replied.
“Just don’t ever again. . . . ,” she wrote to Kruse back on MSN.
“I promise,” Kruse replied. “I have no desire to.” Then, in a sudden shift of focus, he told her he felt like playing a video game for old time’s sake. “I think I’m going to paly pokemon again,” he said. “I’ve had pokemon nostalgia for months.”
Kruse continued to show up sporadically at school—but he couldn’t contain his rage for long. When Samantha overheard Kruse talking about Kim, she asked him to stop because it was too painful. “She was my best friend,” she said. Suddenly, Kruse stood up and started screaming. “No one fucking cares,” he said. “She’s dead. Who gives a shit?” Another student had a similar encounter with Kruse. “I’m glad she’s dead,” he reportedly told the boy. “I hated her.”
Cam and Kruse frequently talked on MSN chat about the ongoing investigation. “Since we killed that bitch and it wasnt to hard we should do it again!” Cam wrote to Kruse on March 25.
Kruse and Cam were brought in for questioning, and the boys admitted to seeing Kim that morning but claimed she left them early to go to school. When a cop asked Kruse what type of person would commit such an act, Kruse said, “Someone who thinks it’s worth it to kill someone, or someone who’s in a fit of rage.”
Soon, police had enough evidence to secure the necessary judicial authorization to monitor and analyze Kruse’s and Cam’s online activities. Keeping Kruse and Cam under close surveillance, the police bugged their homes, their cell phones, and even the gazebo where they hung out in the park. Through forensic analysis of the boys’ computers and cell phones, they dug up their Google and Wikipedia searches, as well as old transcripts of texts and instant messages. In total, the Tech Crimes Unit amassed the equivalent of 1.4 billion sheets of paper on the two.
On Friday, June 18, Kruse and Cam were arrested for Kim’s murder. “They were both extremely calm and somber,” Lagan recalls. Rather than face a trial and jury, the two pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and indignity to human remains and were sentenced to life imprisonment with no possibility of parole for 10 years.
Parents used to be afraid of kids, building bombs in their basements. But today’s teenagers have found a more clandestine spot: a digital basement. “We spend so much time cautioning against strangers online,” Corporal Lagan told me, “but these are people she knew.”
On a drizzly late-spring morning, a little over a year since the murder, I sat with Kim’s family in a crowded, wood-paneled courtroom in Victoria for Cam and Kruse’s placement hearing. The judge was about to determine whether the boys should be transferred to adult penitentiaries.
The psychology reports were damning, suggesting a high probability of recidivism. Kruse was found to be a sexual sadist of the rarest kind, especially for someone so young—a twisted kid who, against enormous odds, found understanding in another disturbed boy.
Kim’s parents would prefer to see the boys die for their crime, but there is no death penalty in Canada. “Like when an animal is sick, you put them down,” Lucy Proctor told me. “They’re not even animals. I don’t like to use that [word] because Kim was a huge animal person. These two are monsters.”
Cam was led into the courtroom first. He wore a white shirt and black pants and had let his sideburns thicken to his jawline. Shackles rattled around his ankles. Since being incarcerated, he had remained isolated and despondent, plagued by nightmares of the crime. He had been trying to erase the memories. “He says his brain is like a computer’s recycling bin,” it was noted in a pre-sentence report. “The information has been processed and then it’s gone.” As he loomed in his box behind bulletproof glass, his defense attorney idly chatted with him about the N.H.L. play-offs.
Kruse followed, also in chains. He was dressed in an ill-fitting gray suit and tie. He wore an owlish pair of glasses, and his hair fell in a bowl cut around his ears. “That’s the one the cops call Harry Potter,” Kim’s grandfather Bob Proctor whispered to me, as the boy took his place before the judge.
The hearing was swift. Both boys would be transferred to adult, facilities where, the prosecutor pointed out, a more comprehensive sexual-offender-treatment program is offered, including chemical castration (a controversial drug-treatment plan used in Canada to reduce the likelihood of recidivism in sex crimes).
Langford residents remain shaken that such killers could somehow grow up in such a small community and go unnoticed. Pacific Secondary School, which Kim and her killers attended, has introduced a violence-threat protocol in the wake of the crime. This allows the police, the school, and social-service agencies to share information on students who are perceived as a threat “so we don’t end up with something tragic,” superintendent Jim Cambridge told me.
Though months had passed since Kim’s death, her friends were still struggling to recover when I met with them at a Starbucks in town. Samantha Kennedy wore a white T-shirt, on which she had scrawled a confessional: “Loss of Family and Friends.” It was an idea that she’d gotten from the television show Glee. Melissa Hajdu nervously chewed her lip. “I haven’t laughed the same since Kim died,” she said.
They had been searching their memories for hints of the horror to come. And they weren’t alone. At least four girls have come forward to a school official to tell of “rough, fast sex, bondage, and verbally abusive comments following sex” perpetrated by Cam, as well as, in one case, date rape, in the months leading up to Kim’s murder.
Melissa remains convinced that the text breakup from Kim sent Kruse over the edge. “Obviously it was the reason he started plotting against her,” she told me. Eventually she fell silent, gazing at her cell phone on the table. “My phone used to buzz all the time,” she said. “I’m always looking to see if I get a text from Kim.”

Upon reading the conversation with Kruse, I felt like he was a very well wired guy. He writes clearly without much mistakes. The topics are mostly around things Kim likes / She wants to talk about and he doesn't make it awkward, not even if he's complimenting her, and not when overstepping boundaries. Which he does, sometimes, but not often. In the released texts his complements only come when it's "needed". They are very well timed, and apart from that he shows a type of care I aslo seeked for in a guy back then. And well well, this all is part of his manipulaton and we all can fall into a trap like this. I quess if I had these conversations with him. His full sentences, and proper use of written language even when talking to friends, I would have been in a pink fog, I admit. Pretty much I was reading this as a love story hoping for the best ending, while knowing the real outcome. That's how manipulative he was. From His messages, I felt genuine interest towards Kim, and considering the end of the story I don't know. Was it all a well played game of manipulation to get to her? Or did this start as real care? Even I am confused here.
He didn't invade her with unwanted compliments, but never let a good opportunity pass. He started clumsily blabbing about him wanting to be honest around her which is unusual for him. Which is sweet... but was it also a lie? I unfortunately won't find my answer here. However, I definitely have an idea. I think it was part of his manipulation work. He opens up, so she can... and there is one more thing behind this. He is the honest one, so Kim now have to feel obliged to be also honest. This is how manipulation works. It's a good built castle made of lies as stones. Altogether, I was also charmed by Kruse even though I know about drinking and drugs (these were my big NO-NOs in boys back in those school years and still) and the rape, potential necromancy and the murder and his psychopathy.
He built this caste on base sentences, such as "I don't like when someone pressures a person into anything." With statements like this, he painted a good picture of what kind of person he was. So our brain is going to sleep on this. As we normally see what we want to see. What we are told. Such as, I care about you... But sometimes, these are just empty words.
Another time, he got very annoyed in a conversation during when Cam had party in his pants. And he made a remark that Kim possibly didn't catch. Kruse used DBB i the conversation. This could be a sexual action in short. But what if he meant Dirty Backstabbing Bastard? I mean, they tried to pick up the same girl. Cam was very invasive and Kim seem innocent. For me he definitely seem possessive in a dangerous level. So I guess, he's angry now because she still didn't shut him off while he talks to her like that. While he, Kruse is trying his best to be charming. Then he makes that remark.
"You'd do any hedonist proud with the ensuing display of mortal decadence."
She doesn't seem to respond to that, so we don't know wheter she undestood that or just skipped. But in this, he exercised intellectual superiority over her to belittle her. He didn't have the controll, so he wasn't nice. And this was one red flag here.
But Kim wasn't even as charmed as I was... She only used him to supress her feelings about her breakup with Zach? And another name popped up then. Josh. The conversation is quite confusing, because I had a copy where all the names were censored, but in the conversation with Cam, it's quite obvious. She had a boyfriend again before she warmed up to Kruse. And at ths point I also wonder what plays out in Kim's head. It's quite obvious, she wasn't feeling right and seeked consolation in others without strong feelings towards them. And it's easy to judge now, as an adult, but I remember how dispairing feeling it is to be a teen. Knowing nothing, not understanding what's going on, seeking for warmth, not being understood. Loss of a boyfriend or just rejection.
However, Kim had this confusing timeline with boyfriends. Zach lasted for a few months, she had Josh. While she still let Kruse and Cam flirting. The she is close enough to Kruse and break up in a text message to get beck together with well... one of them or someone. Such a drama unfolding.
She was also confused. After being bullied for her entire childhood, now she is pretty popular with boys. She states it in a conversation with Cameron for some reason. I don't know if this was her intention - probably not - but he clearly understood this as a sign of rejection. Which didn't make him back down.
Kim used these boys to lessen her own pain. She never actually rejected Cam. She didn't want to loose his "friendship". Which according to tha MSN chatlogs... was never a real friendship. And she admitted to a friend, Samantha, she only wants to be with Kruse because the fact they are close friends with Zach lessen her pain over loosing him. Samantha advised her to not lead Kruse on if she doesn't like him. After the short "relationship" she admints Cam, "it didn't feel right".
And she also tells Kruse, noone can replace Zach... While she gets back together with Josh? or is that Zach now, again?
I mean, we probably all had a boyfriend who didn't feel right after all. That feeling is valid. Her actions are quite cruel?
In the messages, it is clear, that Kim got together with a guy with his name censored. As Zack wasn't normally censored, it might have been someone else. My stomach felt a bit upside down in this conversatioon as Kruse sent her the message and she replied proudly. She replied she sent the news over to someone who she actually hates. I guessed it might be a girl, but again censored name. So Kim already started dating with Kruse at this point and she just "broke it off" with a text message. While coming back together with this other guy and first thing they exchange msn messages, she acts like nothing.
Kruse's answer is spine chilling here for me. He replies he doesn't care, which at this moment for me is clearly not true. The whole conversation is very off but Kim says a big thanks for being understanding. Which he is absolutely not. He seem to be disappointed, lost and... different. Might be broken. From this point, he's pretty cruel in the conversation which in unexpected for Kim, but I wasn't surprised the slightest.
In fact... in this conversation. I found nothing disturbing on Kruse's side and I was upset with how the girl deals with her friendships that she allegedly hold dear. This is the most disturbing. His reactions are normal, while he actually seem to really hate her to the core for this. And I strongly belive this event was the turning point when Kruse lost it. Even IF he had a chance to live a better life for a while, now he's having dark fantasies of revenge. He is 16, and it is also heartbreaking as he seem to be a well put together guy with a really-really dark past (as he is the son of a rapist), a mother who seemingly neglects him and this bad of friends using drugs and stuff. For me, it sounds like just a matter of time...
The conversation with Cam starts on a romantic note. He keeps complimenting her sweetly. It buggs me a bit as she always replies with thanks but the things are still popping up leaving the conversation always awkward and unenjoyable as they have no proper topics to talk about apart from the same thing.
I'm also outraged by the fact he keep telling her these, but she still replies surprised once he says he loves her. She seemed once again awkward, but this boy doesn't care. He mentions her boyfriend... but still confessing. And there is a promise of waiting for her to be free again. She's barely responding to these and if these were sent to me, I'd consider them outright harrasment. I normally stopped any kinds of conversations with guys like that. He's even more concerning after what the girls say who had sex with him. He allegedly raped a girl, bonded another, and he was violent.
The conversation then reaches a point where he blackmails her on the 18th of August! It happens during a conversation when he invites her into his pants and she acts like she's willing to go as a VIP if there are others. I'd say she's either very naive and simple or just wants to knock the whole stuff off by not receiving the comments. But he says he'll show the messages to the guy she now dates. For a long period of at least 20 minutes, he keeps trying to force her to drop her clothes on camera for him to save her relationship... This was the most boring conversations I've ever seen, and we mostly just saw Cam sending all that. Then, he gets bored and swiches. it's like a proper plot twist. He asks what's up, and he doen't understand why Kim is upset. He's saying he had no electricity in the last 20 minutes and that's all there is to it. Brushed off! And he says there is no previous messages. He is trying to play with her perception of reality, gaslighting her into thinking she was just having and episode and it never happened. Actually... reading that part felt like reading a creepy pasta, and it's not a good thing if a friend does that.
This SHOCKED me, this is creepy and I would never talk to anyone like that again. It can be a personality disorder, but I don't think it was. He just tried to scare her on a purpose or just thought she'll do anything to save her relationship. This is the first time Kim stands up against Cam in the released part of the conversations.
While in the same time, Kruse being completely ok in his conversation with a bit of teasing but not too annyoingly. By ok, I mean he never really insulted her until. I wonder... Did they try to catch her - and possibly others - by Cam acting like an asshole to lure Kim / girls into Kruse's arms? Or it's just how it is. Because 2 days later the messages between Kruse and Kim turn into something almost too sweet. They are chattering like a sweet couple in love.
However it is. Their relationship's turning point is where she breaks up with him in a text message to be with someone else. It seems like the little push Kruse needed to end up as a murderer. Let's not forget about him being diagnosed with psychopaty since, so it's not like you're dumping an ordinary guy in a text message. His brain works in a different way. His Dad raped a teen and killed her, so it runs in the family as they say. And also, our onlook on certain events is highly depending on how we receive it. And if things are happening to us, it suddenly seem pretty normal even if these are crazy things. For example, his dad. For me it's mind blowing to know. For him it was just how things are. Normal. He grew up in this.
Altogether... I think even if Kim didn't trigger this with the breakup, these guys were deemed to become sexual offender or murderer. But she might have survived if.... I don't know. If she was busy that day... or if she offended by their late attitude towards her, just cut them off forever. I had to write this to close this chapter of my life. This for a reson touched me in a very soft spot.
Quite long, and 100% subjective opinion, but thank you for reading.
>> Wellwood - Proctor transcript
>> Wellwood - Proctor transcript 2
>> Moffat - Proctor transcript
>> Van transcript 1
>> Van transcript 2
>> Van transcript 3
For most of the arcticle, my source was vanityfair.com
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>> Location
>> Personality
>> Criminals
>> Relationships
>> The murder
>> Investigation
>> Verdict
>> My personal insight
>> Files

>> Canadiantruecrime.ca
>> Vanity Fair
>> Medium.com
>> Cbc.ca
>> Nbcnews.com
>> Timescolonist.com
>> Zeus-Dragon tumblr

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