forums
new posts
donate
UER Store
events
location db
db map
search
members
faq
terms of service
privacy policy
register
login




UE Location DB > Christ Church - St. James > News story about arson at chruch (Viewed 5575 times)
phrenzee 


Location: Canada
Gender: Male
Total Likes: 156 likes




 |  | 
News story about arson at chruch
< on 8/19/2007 5:15 PM >
Reply with Quote
Posted on Forum: UER Forum
The link under the Stories section isn't working for me. Here is the story for any others who may not be able to access that link.

Toronto police suspect arson-murder link

Last Updated: Friday, November 13, 1998

CBC News

Toronto police are searching for a Sunday school teacher after a series of fires and a homicide. They suspect a connection between fires at three city churches and the discovery of a man's body Thursday.
Bob Ivens, 49, was found dead in the morgue at the University of Toronto. It's a controlled area that few people have access to. Ivens worked there as an anatomy lab supervisor.

Police are now looking for Stephen Toussaint, 54. He was a colleague at the lab, and a member of one of the churches that was set ablaze Thursday. Toussaint is listed as missing and hasn't returned to his home. According to police his family is worried.

The first fire began around 5 a.m. It took 60 firefighters two hours to douse a fire in a historic church, then they raced off to fight fires at two other nearby churches.

The largest fire caused an estimated $1.5 million in damages at the Christ Church St. James, a British Methodist Episcopal church in the city's west end. It served as the spiritual centre of Toronto's West Indian community for 150 years.


Source




strike300 


Location: Gretna, Louisiana
Gender: Male
Total Likes: 0 likes




 |  | 
Re: News story about arson at chruch
< Reply # 1 on 9/28/2007 12:46 AM >
Reply with Quote
Posted on Forum: UER Forum
Any updates to this?




Yehoshua 


Location: Ontario
Gender: Male
Total Likes: 0 likes




 |  | 
Re: News story about arson at chruch
< Reply # 2 on 9/30/2007 6:45 AM >
Reply with Quote
Posted on Forum: UER Forum
July 26, 1999

The confirmation that human remains found in Scarborough last week belong to former U of T employee Stephen Toussaint — wanted in connection with a colleague’s murder — is a “very sad development,” says the acting dean of medicine.

“Our sympathy is with his family,” said Professor Murray Urowitz on Friday. “Hopefully, now the police will be able to shed more light on what happened last year and the family and friends of both men can have some closure.”

Police found Toussaint’s body July 21 in a bushy area at the foot of the Scarborough Bluffs, near Brimley Road. The 54-year-old man worked in the Faculty of Medicine’s anatomy laboratory until April 16, 1998, when he disappeared following the murder of Robert Ivens, 49, an assistant in the same laboratory.

Detective Greg McLane of the Metro Toronto Police Services’ homicide squad said Friday afternoon that results of a partial post-mortem conducted on Toussaint earlier that day showed no evidence of foul play. McLane added further tests still have to done and complete results won’t be known until the middle of this week.




Our Citizen.
Our Justice.
Bring Omar Khadr back to Canada.
Woodstock 


Location: Toronto
Gender: Male
Total Likes: 0 likes


Most people respect the badge, Everyone respects the gun.

 |  | 
Re: News story about arson at chruch
< Reply # 3 on 9/9/2009 5:35 AM >
Reply with Quote
Posted on Forum: UER Forum
This is all I could find-

http://www.ntropy.us/2008/02/28/stjames/





UE Location DB > Christ Church - St. James > News story about arson at chruch (Viewed 5575 times)


Add a poll to this thread



This thread is in a public category, and can't be made private.



All content and images copyright © 2002-2024 UER.CA and respective creators. Graphical Design by Crossfire.
To contact webmaster, or click to email with problems or other questions about this site: UER CONTACT
View Terms of Service | View Privacy Policy | Server colocation provided by Beanfield
This page was generated for you in 93 milliseconds. Since June 23, 2002, a total of 738481963 pages have been generated.