Landfill search delay baffles retired police officer - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 05:49 AM | Calgary | 0.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Landfill search delay baffles retired police officer

A retired Winnipeg homicide investigator says he doesn't understand why police have not started searching the Brady Road landfill for the remains of Tanya Nepinak.

'They have to get in there,' Bill VanderGraaf says of search for Tanya Nepinak's remains

Winnipeg police officers and recruits sift through garbage at the Brady Road landfill in August 1987 for the body of Thomas Riggins, 22. The body was found after 12 days of searching. (CBC)

A retired Winnipeg homicide investigator says he doesn't understand why police have not started searching the Brady Road landfill for the remains of Tanya Nepinak.

Police believe Nepinak, a 31-year-old womanwho went missing last year, was a victim of Shawn Lamb, who has beencharged with second-degree murderin her death.

Nepinak's remains have never been found, but police believethey may be buried somewherein the city landfill.

A search for the remainshas yet to be launched, which baffles retired staff sergeant Bill VanderGraaf, who was involved in a police search at the same landfill 25 years ago.

"I don't know what the reason is for the delay, particularly with winter coming up," VanderGraaf told CBC News in an interview.

"I simply don't have a good understanding as to why they would want to delay. They have to get in there; I think they know that."

Body found in 1987 search

In August 1987, Winnipeg police searched the Brady Road landfill for the body of Thomas Riggins, a 22-year-old drifter from Seattle.

At the time, police believed Riggins was killed and his body placed in a garbage bin that was emptied at the dump.

Bill VanderGraaf, a retired Winnipeg police staff sergeant, says the successful search of the landfill in 1987 was started within weeks of Riggins's death. (CBC)

Police officers and recruits sifted through tonnes of garbage with rakes, picks and a front-end loader.

"He would take a big load andspread it in a clean area, and people would simply have an examination of it," VanderGraaf recalled.

Officers founda body after about 12 days of searching, and later confirmed it was Riggins.

VanderGraaf said the search began weeks after Riggins was killed, based on good information that came quickly after the man's death.

By contrast, it has been just over a year since Nepinak was last seenleaving her Sherbrook Street homeon Sept. 13, 2011. It is not known when she died.

"If this had happened in Tuxedo and we had a young girl from Tuxedo laying in the dump, we'd be out there digging months ago," VanderGraaf said.

Lamb has also been charged in connection with the deaths of Carolyn Sinclair, 25, and Lorna Blacksmith, 18, whose remains were recovered.