October 22, 2024

CANADA: Suspected 30yo Female Serial Killer Arrested In Connection To 3 Ontario Murders; A 60yo Woman in Toronto. 47yo Man in Niagra Falls. 77yo Man In Ontario.

🚨NO WHITE SUPREMACISTS INVOLVED🚨

🚨NO ISLAMIC TERRORISTS INVOLVED🚨
CHCH News published October 5, 2024: Suspected serial killer arrested in connection to 3 Ontario murders.

Niagara Police said they’ve identified a mystery woman they were looking for in their investigation. Still, there’s no explanation for the murders this week in Hamilton, Niagara, and Toronto.

With accused killer Sabrina Kauldhar under arrest and charged with multiple murders, Niagara Police say more than 100 investigators are working on this case.

They were looking for a woman who was recorded on video buying clothing at the Giant Tiger in Burlington early in the week.

They say that clothing was found in the possession of the murder suspect.

Today, police say the woman has been located, is cooperating with police, is not connected to any of the offenses, and is not facing any charges.

According to police, on Tuesday, a woman in her 60s was found dead at home in the Keele and Dundas area of Toronto with visible signs of trauma.

On Wednesday, 47-year-old Lance Cunningham was attacked at random and killed in a park in Niagara Falls.

Then Thursday, 77-year-old Mario Bilich, a retired teacher, was stabbed and killed in downtown Hamilton.

30-year-old Kauldhar was later arrested at a hotel in Burlington.

She’s charged with first-degree murder in the Toronto death and two counts of second-degree murder in the Niagara and Hamilton killings, which police say were random attacks.
CBC News published October 4, 2024: Woman charged in 3 murders in Toronto, Niagara Falls, Hamilton. A 30-year-old Toronto woman has been arrested and charged with murder in three separate deaths of people in Toronto, Niagara Falls and Hamilton, according to the Toronto police.

CBS News
written Staff, AFP
Monday October 7, 2024

A woman described by police as a serial killer was arrested and charged on Friday with three murders from earlier in the week in Toronto, Niagara Falls and another Canadian city. The grisly attacks spanned three days from Tuesday to Thursday.

"She is a serial killer," Niagara Regional Police Chief Bill Fordy told reporters when asked if the label was fitting.

Sabrina Kauldhar, 30, was arrested at a suburban Toronto hotel after police linked the killings, determining the suspect's description matched in each case. Police said detectives are also trying to identify a woman who was seen on CCTV footage on Tuesday buying clothing that Kauldhar had in her possession at the time of her arrest.

Kauldhar faces murder charges in the deaths of a 60-year-old woman in her Toronto home, a 47-year-old man at a Niagara Falls park and a 77-year-old man in a Hamilton, Ontario, parking lot.

Investigators told AFP the first victim in Toronto, who was found with "visible trauma" to the body, was known to her assailant.

Fordy said the suspect is believed to have randomly targeted her victims in Hamilton and Niagara Falls, identified by police as Mario Bilich and Lance Cunningham.

The two men "were both going about their business and we believe that they were random attacks," Fordy said.

Police came across Cunningham in Niagara Falls after responding to emergency calls about a disturbance. He was pronounced dead at the park.

Cunningham's wife, Kim, told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. that they have a 13-year-old daughter together.

"He did not deserve this," she said in an email to the outlet. "I want my husband back."

Bilich — a retired schoolteacher who was allegedly followed by the suspect to his vehicle in a Hamilton parking lot — suffered "significant injuries consistent with stab wounds," police said in a statement. He later died in a hospital.

"Investigators were able to link the Hamilton homicide to the recent murder in John Allen Park in Niagara Falls, determining the suspect matched the description in both cases," police said. "An additional link was made to the active homicide investigation from October 1 in Toronto."

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