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Pages in category "Murder in Manitoba" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. ... This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. 2022 Winnipeg ...
The killings were committed between the months of March and May 2022. [15] Police believe Buffalo Woman was killed on or around March 15. [11] [1] [22] Marcedes Myran's last contact with her family took place around this time. [22] Investigators believe that Harris was killed on May 1, 2022, [1] the day she was last seen alive. [11] [22]
Pages in category "People murdered in Manitoba" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. +
Date Victim Type Location — Circumstances July 29, 2024: John Woods, 60, male Wild Canada, Shamattawa First Nation, Manitoba — The 60-year-old who went missing in a northeastern Manitoba First Nation, Canada, is believed to have been killed by a bear, RCMP say, a week after police responded to a bear attack that left another person in the area injured.
Pages in category "Violence against women in Manitoba" ... This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. 2022 Winnipeg serial killings; C.
This is a list of events in Canada and its predecessors that are commonly characterized as massacres. Massacre is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as "the indiscriminate and brutal slaughter of people or (less commonly) animals; carnage, butchery, slaughter in numbers"; it also states that the term is used "in the names of certain massacres of history".
James Peterson was shot in the kitchen, while his wife Evelyn and her one-year-old baby were found in the backyard. The other six children were shot while sleeping in their bedrooms. Their ages ranged from 2 to 17 years old. Phyllis Peterson, then 4 years old, was the lone survivor of the massacre. [3]
Timothy Richard McLean Jr., was born on 3 October 1985, in Winnipeg, Manitoba. [10] He grew up both in Winnipeg and in Elie, Manitoba.He was 22 years old at the time of his death, and had been working as a carnival worker, specifically a carnival barker in Edmonton, Alberta.