Lack of faith in Toronto police prompts Church and Wellesley to take safety into its own hands - Action News
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Lack of faith in Toronto police prompts Church and Wellesley to take safety into its own hands

Members of the Church and Wellesley neighbourhood are returning to "old school ways" to keep themselves safe in the wake of two recent deaths and a string of disappearances, a community leader says.

Community leader says residents are relying on each other, not police, after deaths, disappearances

Tess Richey, far left, was found dead on Nov. 29. Andrew Kinsman, centre-left, was reported missing on June 26. Selim Esen, centre-right, was reported missing on April 14. Alloura Wells, far right, was found dead on August 5. (Rachel Richey; Toronto Police Service)

Members of the Church and Wellesley neighbourhood are returning to "old school ways" to keep themselves safe in the wake of two recent deaths and a string of disappearances, a community leader says.

Nicki Ward, director of the Church-Wellesley Neighbourhood Association, says that means residents are looking out for each other, reporting bad dates and keeping an eye on suspicious people.

"Clearly, people are recognizing, reluctantly, that we as community members have to engage if Toronto Police Services won't," Ward told Metro Morning on Monday.
Nicki Ward, director of Church-Wellesley Neighbourhood Association, says policing and lighting need to improve in the area in the wake of two recent deaths and a string of disappearances. (CBC)

Ward said transgender people who live in Church and Wellesley area, in particular, have lost faith in the police forcebecause of the way it handled the death of resident Alloura Wells.

Wells, 27, a transgender woman, was found dead on August 5 in a Rosedale ravine. She was reported missing by her father on Nov. 5, and her remains were identified on Nov. 30 through DNA testing.

Ward says it's clear the police did not make the case a priority.

"What little confidence that the community had in the Toronto Police Servicehas completely evaporated, and I think, with good reason," Ward said.

The neighbourhood association is developing a safe walk program and exploringthe idea of developing an app that would work as a panic button and alert "trusted people."

Ward said she would liketo talk to Ryerson University and University of Toronto officials to find out how they have conducted safe walks.

"Safety walks have been put forth by one of our members and it has caught fire as an idea," she said.
Alloura Wells, 27, a transgender woman, was found dead on August 5 in a Rosedale ravine. (Toronto Police Service)

She said the neighbourhood, a small geographic area, is characterized by "a great deal of courage and resilience," but described the relationship between the LGBTQ community and the police as "broken."

The lack of faith in police has also developed in the wake of the death of Tess Richey, 22, she said. Richey went missing on Nov. 25 at 3 a.m. and was found deadon Nov. 29 at 3:30 p.m.

It was her mother, in from North Bay to help search, that found her body.

The pattern in the Richey case and the Wells case was very similar, Ward said. "The police were slow off the mark."

Ward, who met with Toronto Police Service Chief Mark Saunders on Friday, said there has been a lack of "tender loving care" by the police in the neighbourhood for close to two years.
Tess Richey, 22, went missing on Nov. 25 at 3 a.m. and her body was found on Nov. 29 at 3:30 p.m. (Rachel Richey)

"When you report a missing person, the first 24 hours are incredibly important. And historically, and certainly in our neighbourhood, the police services have ignored missing persons reports, sometimes for days, and indeed weeks, or in one case months, before the missing persons report was actually accepted as real."

In theinterview, Ward said the community has"institutional memory" from previous decades that it will draw upon to try to protect itself from violence.

"Members of our community have lived through times when there was no police protection," she said."We want to tap into that."

Police need to improve 911 response times, how it distributes officers in the neighbourhood and the degree of priority it places on crimes reported in the area,she said.

Part of the policing problem is also due to the fact that the neighbourhood lies at the junction of Toronto police's 51, 52, 53 divisions, a problem that Ward said is unacknowledged.

The city could alsoimprove lighting in the area, she added.

With files from Metro Morning