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Calgary

DNA leads to arrest 16 years after shooting death of Calgary musician

Sixteen years after Paul Hepher was shot dead in a Calgary basement, police have charged a suspect with second-degree murder.

Police say Terrance Lane Wardale, 61, was known to the victim and targeted him 'for financial reasons' in 2001

Paul Hepher was known around Calgary for his music and was among the performers at the city's inaugural folk festival in 1980. (Submitted by Ian Hepher)

Sixteen years after Paul Hepher was shot dead in a Calgary basement, police have charged a suspect with second-degree murder.

"A homicide file is never truly closed," Insp. Don Coleman said Tuesday, while announcing the charge.

"They always remain active."

TerranceLaneWardale, 61, was arrested last week and made a brief court appearance Tuesday.

He is accused of killingHepher, an amateur musician, in 2001.

It was on March 4 of that year that police were first called to a home in the 500 block of19thAvenue N.W., whereHepher'sbody was discovered in a basement suite.

An autopsy confirmed the 50-year-olddied as a result of a shooting.

Coleman said police recovered the handgun they believe was the murder weapon in the past week.

Family still wonders why

For about a decade after the murder, Ian Hepher said he called police every year around the anniversary of his brother's death, hoping the case wouldn't "go cold."

But he said itwas totally out of the blue when police called him in the past week about the arrest.

"I'm glad the police cared enough about this to carry on," he said.

He only wished his parents were alive to hear the news.

"I don't think my mother ever recovered," he said.

"I wish my dad was around. He died about 18 months ago.He was always wanting to know what had happened. I feel that way too."

MichaelHepherwas 27 years old when his uncle was murdered and said he remembered him as awriter as well as a musician.

He recalled his uncle taking off with a typewriter and a bicycle to travelNew Zealand in the1970s.

Michael Hepher was 27 years old at the time his uncle was shot and killed. He says he's relieved the family will soon have more answers. (Supplied)

"He was a unique person," Michael said.

"He was deeper. There was something about him that was intangible, I guess is what I'm trying to say. There was a lot going on under the surface and you kind of had to discover it."

Michael said he's not feeling "angry or vengeful"about the murder at this point but he's still curious about what happened to his uncle.

"Here were are, 16 years later, and we really had come to a point where we had just all accepted that this would be a question mark in our lives," he said.

"I guess I'd like to see justice be served but also just the details of the story coming out are the most important part to know what his last hours were like and why this all happened."

'He had a sharp wit'

Hepherwas known around Calgary for his music. He was among the performers at the city's inaugural folk festival in 1980.

PatBucknametHepherin themid-1970s, when they were both playing in the bars and clubs of Calgary's live-music scene.

They struck up a friendship andHepherjoinedBucknain British Columbia for a while, living on the West Coast with him and his family. ButHepherlonged for the sun and blue sky of Alberta and later moved back to Calgary.

Hepher later wrote the song that became the title track for Buckna's 1982 album, Roll Me a Dream.

"I found his use of language was really quite good,"Bucknasaid of Hepher's songwriting.

"He'd had a background writing for newspapers, doing music reviews and he had a very sharp wit and some of that was reflected in the lyrics of his songs."

The two drifted apart after that, butBucknaremembered their friendship fondly.

"I was quite shocked to hear about his murder back in the early 2000s," he said.

Insp. Don Coleman speaks to reporters about the arrest in the 2001 homicide of Paul Hepher. (Monty Kruger/CBC)

Police said Hepher had no criminal history and led a relatively quiet life.

Before his body was discovered, hehad been last seen alive on theafternoon of Feb. 28, 2001.

Colemansaid investigators found "numerous pieces of forensic evidence" in the basement suite but did not identify any suspects in the initial investigation.

Later, he said a list of more than a dozen potential suspects was compiled and investigators worked to confirm or eliminate each one.

The investigation continued under the mantle of three separate homicide operations over the ensuing decade and a half.

New evidence

In early 2014, police said new evidence was obtained and, on May 21 of that year, an RCMP crime lab confirmed a match to forensic evidence left at the scene.

"The new evidence that pushed the case forward was DNA-related," Coleman said, without offering further details.

At that point, investigators had a suspect in mind, but it took another 22 months to find him.

The man was eventually located in Sherwood Park, at which point police said they initiated "further investigative strategies ...to ensure the case had enough evidence to move forward with charges."

Court proceedings

Coleman said Wardale didn't offer up a sample of his own DNA and the sample was obtained through yet-to-be disclosed methods.

"The exact specifics of that I obviously can't get into," he said.

"That's for court. It will be disclosed in court."

Coleman said Wardale and Hepher were known to each other and described them as "acquaintances."

He said police believe Hepher was targeted "for financial reasons."

Wardale made a brief first court appearance before provincial court judge Sean Dunniganon Tuesday morning.

He appeared viaCCTV from the Calgary Remand Centre wearing a blue jumpsuit.

The case was put over toMay 4 to give Wardaletime to find a lawyer.

With files from Elizabeth Snaddon, Meghan Grant and Colleen Underwood