Ken Lee, 59, identified as victim of alleged 'swarming' attack by teen girls in Toronto - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 12:08 AM | Calgary | -0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Ken Lee, 59, identified as victim of alleged 'swarming' attack by teen girls in Toronto

Toronto police have identified a man killed in an alleged "swarming" attack by eight teenage girls last month in Toronto as Ken Lee.

8 teenage girls charged with murder in Lee's death, Lee's name added to Toronto Homeless Memorial

Ken Lee, the 59-year-old victim of a deadly swarming attack allegedly by eight teenage girls in downtown Toronto in December 2022, is pictured in an undated photo.
Ken Lee, 59, died in hospital after he was allegedly beaten and stabbed by a group of teenage girls in December. (Toronto Police Service)

Police have identified a man killed in an alleged "swarming"attack by eight teenage girlsin Torontolast month as Ken Lee.

Lee, 59, was pronounced dead in hospital after he was allegedly beaten and stabbed by the group of girls outside a downtown shelter in the early morning hours ofDec. 18, 2022.

Investigators said at the time they were working to notify Lee's next of kin of his death. Lee was from Toronto, police said in a news release Tuesday.

All eight girls, who range in age from 13 to 16 years old, were charged with second-degree murder. One was granted bail in late December, while the resthave bail hearings scheduled for later this month.

Their identities are protected under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.

At a Tuesday ceremony at the Toronto Homeless Memorialoutside the Church of the Holy Trinity in the city's downtown core,Diana Chan McNally, harm reduction case manager at All Saints Toronto, said Lee's death is incomprehensible.

"Hearing something like that and the people who were involved,it's just something that's completely beyond my understanding," she said.

She said anecdotally,sheis seeingan increase of violence against people who are actively living on the street.

"This is the most extreme example of that, but we see it all the time. I get people coming in with all kinds of injuries from being beat up by complete strangers," she said."This isn't something that's new, it's ongoing, but I see it more and more.

"I think there's just so much hatred and dehumanization of people who are unhoused."

X
Advocates added 15 names to the Toronto Homeless Memorial outside the Church of the Holy Trinity in downtown Toronto on Tuesday, saying the violence against unhoused people must stop. One of the names was Ken Lee. (Muriel Draaisma/CBC)

Doug Johnson Hatlem, a street pastor and spokesperson for Sanctuary Toronto, which works with the homeless, said he learned that Lee had immigrated from Hong Kong and was working to get housing.

Those who knew Lee said he was a quiet man who had been defending a friend when the group of teens allegedly attacked, hesaid.

"Nobody was surprised that he would stick up for somebody like that," Johnson Hatlemsaid.

Gru, a former homeless individual who organized Tuesday's memorial, said he and others living on the streets had one thought come to their mind after hearing about Lee's death.

"That could be me," he said.

"Most unhoused people will tell you personal stories of being chased by people who are looking to beat them up ... We all know someone who died, we all know someone who was attacked."

Gru, a Toronto advocate for the unhoused, speaks at a memorial outside Holy Trinity church in downtown Toronto on Jan. 10, 2023. Ken Lee, 59, who was identified as the victim of an alleged 'swarming' attack by teen girls, was added to the homeless deaths memorial.
Gru, a Toronto advocate for the unhoused, speaks at a memorial outside Holy Trinity church in downtown Toronto on Jan. 10, 2023. Ken Lee, 59, who was identified as the victim of an alleged 'swarming' attack by teen girls, was added to the homeless deaths memorial. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Police believe liquor bottle theft involved

A friend of Lee's who saw his alleged attack previously told CBC Toronto the girls had tried to take a liquor bottle from her and Lee had tried to stop them. The lead detective on the case later confirmed that police believe there was an attempted theft "likely of a liquor bottle" during the initial phase of the deadly encounter.

The attack happened at about12:15 a.m. local time,near the corner ofYork Street and University Avenue, just steps from Union Station.

Det.-Sgt. Terry Brownesaid in December that police chose to charge all of the teens with second-degree murder because each girl "played a role" in the slaying.

"All eight were together. All eight were involved," he said. "I won't say what each one individually did, but all eight weretogether and participating in this event, which is disturbing."

He described the attack as a "swarming," which normally involves selecting a target to victimize.

With files from The Canadian Press