Sanctioned Killers
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The RCMP have been aiding a known group of killers to avoid justice for many years in Canada. These killers were later identified as being confidential protected police informants. The Police have gone to great lengths to protect their informants from prosecution and aggressively obstruct the victims families from having any recourse to justice. These "special" informants are functioning as Police agents, above the law and in certain cases, licensed to kill!

Little about the laws governing these "untouchables" is known and little is ever willingly disclosed by the RCMP. In most cases, Canadian laws will prohibit you from knowing, or the media from publishing, the identities of police informants .  
see- justice department quiz (question #1)

What is known is that the number of these "informants" is constantly being increased and they are involved in criminal activity, while at the same time, the RCMP is urging the public to inform them of any criminal activity. 
see- RCMP website- number of informants (final paragraph)

There are great dangers for anyone who accidentally comes in contact with these operatives. Inevitably some innocent well intentioned citizens or cops will witness some form of criminal activity and unknowingly inform on one of these sanctioned killers. What happens then? The investigation of RCMP agent Shannon Murrin, charged with murdering eight year old Mindy Tran, exposed a troubling pattern of dead and obstructed witnesses. 
see-
Mindy Tran's dead witnesses:

How do you know when you have been a victim of, or witness to, the activities of a police agent when his status is virtually a state secret?? The police are not just going to tell you. The following cases demonstrate the types of people utilized as informants, the crimes being committed, and the tactics employed by the Police to obstruct justice for members of this group, which includes several well known serial killers
 
Bar0023 (2K)

This man confessed to having committed 43 murders in 1986, supposedly before turning police informant, and assuming a new identity under the witness protection program.
see story

Cory Patterson, an admitted member of these informant/ killers claimed there were others like him, he was never charged, just relocated. Patterson was found dead after he informed on his police handlers and disclosed his protected informant status to a journalist. The CBC fifth Estate investigated and aired the program.
quote
-
Justice Paul Hermiston couldn't believe what he was hearing. Never in his career had he heard of such a bizarre case. He was at a loss to even speculate why the RCMP would hire such a wicked man.
see story

Clifford Robert Olson, Canada’s most notorious serial killer, was an informant and received hundreds of thousands of dollars from the police following his arrest. He was a suspect when there was only one victim, was heavily implicated when there were three, but went on to kill eleven innocent children before the authorities finally decided to stop his killing spree. Before any of these murders began, Olson was well known to police as Bobo the prison informant, a brutal serial rapist of young male inmates.
see-  Bobo the prison rapist 
Olson had also committed approximately eighty rapes around Vancouver without ever being apprehended?
quote-This is a fellow that committed approximately eighty rapes in Greater Vancouver. We know from undercover policewomen who were in his home when he was identified as a suspect that he actually had a map up on the wall of his apartment, his flat, and on the map he had marked up the locations of had a map up on the wall of his apartment, his flat, and on the map he had marked up the locations of his attacks.
see pg/4- Kim Rossmo 

see- Clifford Olson named as informant.
Quote:
Since 1981, questions have been raised about the search for Canada's first known serial killer. This account shows in meticulous detail, how the investigation unfolded from the outset. It is possible that Olson might have been stopped early in his rampage, when two officers, each working separate cases, identified him as a suspect.
see- Olson's full story 

The murder of Leo LaChance disclosed the complicity of the Crown and the RCMP in a cover-up to benefit this killer, a known RCMP informant. Information regarding this killer's protected informant status was prohibited from being made known during the court case and even withheld from the subsequent inquiry.
see- story


This informant was on the RCMP payroll when he killed two people. He confessed, yet no charges were ever laid. This story has now been removed from news site- www.montrealgazettemay17_2002.pdf Contact them for information as to why this has now been removed from their website.

This informant was involved in many murders and was authorized to receive two million dollars from the RCMP at the time of his death. 
Quote:
Serious questions are being asked as to why the RCMP looked the other way when they knew that their informant, Danny Kane, was personally involved in almost a dozen different murders.
see- story

Recently, CTV W5 looked into another suspicious case in Kenora Ontario. A suspect was arrested and charged with murder. Years later the charge was stayed when another suspect surfaced. The other suspect, a police informant, the police investigator, his uncle! The police refuse to investigate further or to charge the cop.
see- W5 story

Bar0023 (2K)

A suspicious pattern of wrongful convictions is also being found in Canada. Many of these high profile cases are not only suspicious in how the wrong suspect was convicted but by what transpired in regard to the "other suspect". If the Police will deliberately obstruct justice even when it aids an informant involved in the murder of a child,
would they also deliberately pursue a wrongful conviction against an innocent individual in order for another of their informants to avoid investigation? A case comparison of the falsely acquitted informant Shannon Murrin and the wrongfully convicted Thomas Sophonow may provide the rosetta stone to answer that question. 
see- Murrin Sophonow case comparison

Thomas Sophonow appears to have been deliberately pursued and falsely convicted of murder in order for the real perpetrator, a rapist, police informant, and reputed international serial killer, to avoid investigation.  Look at the unprecedented treatment afforded to Terry Arnold, the other suspect in this case. Arnold is suspected of murders right from Canada to Mexico. The American Bar Association has openly identified this suspect as being a Canadian informant.
see- Terry Arnold

David Milgaard spent decades in prison for a murder he did not commit. The police never found the real killer, it took a private investigation launched by Milgaard's mother to unearth him.
see- Mrs. Milgaard finds killer
The killer turned out to be
another suspected police informant Larry Fisher, a serial rapist and murderer who had suspiciously avoided investigation but was later convicted after DNA exonerated Milgaard. 
see- Larry Fisher informant  
At the time of the murder, Fisher was living with Cadrain, a Saskatoon Police informant who was actively deflecting suspicion away from his friend Fisher by falsely implicating Milgaard. 

see-quote:
Larry Fisher  had lived in Cadrain's basement at the time of Miller's murder. Karst said he didn't realize that at the time, and he doesn't know why he and Det.-Sgt. Ray Mackie asked Cadrain if he knew anything about an unnamed suspect in the new rape case.
Quote: from David Milgaard's mother.

"If there was one most important point of all, I guess I'd like to know why when (Larry) Fisher was caught, he went through the system in Regina. Nobody knew about it. It never made the papers. How did they manage that and why? I mean that doesn't make sense. You've got a serial rapist and you don't tell anybody about it? You don't tell the victims about it, you don't put it in the paper so people can be relieved? There was a coverup in no uncertain terms, as far as I'm concerned, and that's what needs to come out. What happened and why and who did it. Who was responsible."
An inquiry is now underway. The RCMP handler of RCMP agent Shannon Murrin, conducted the re-investigation of several key witnesses for Milgaard's inquiry. Documented/see inquiry- (pg. 63)
see- Links to  Milgaard information 

Stephen Truscott- Again viable suspects overlooked in one of Canada's first wrongful convictions.
see- Steven Truscott story
Quote-

Truscott's lawyers, in a 561-page brief to then-justice minister Anne McLellan in November, 2001, claimed that police, in their haste to arrest the teenager, were blind to other suspects who were around in the summer of 1959.
The brief alleged police overlooked a pedophile who was stationed at the military base and a rapist who had repaired a clothes dryer at the Harper home and moved to the United States shortly after the girl's death.
A book was written chronicling the investigation.
quote:

"Until You Are Dead"   reveals witnesses not called upon to testify; other, more likely suspects, including a known pedophile, never questioned; and important leads that were kept from the defence, the judge and jurors. Boxes of police files and military records hidden or buried in government vaults reveal astonishing and disturbing information about an investigation and trial the authorities always claimed was above reproach. All told, the book uncovers a wealth of information that could have lead to a different verdict and a very different life for the young boy who was nearly executed over forty years ago.
The Police and the Military were well aware that a sexual predator was operating in the area at the time.
see- the other suspect

Recent news reports are raising concerns of witness obstruction in the investigation of the other suspect, a member of the Canadian military! 
quote:
TRACEY TYLER, Toronto Star, LEGAL AFFAIRS REPORTER, Nov. 29, 2005.
A key witness at Steven Truscott's 1959 murder trial claims she was awakened in the dead of night and taken to a police station at an air force base in Clinton, Ont., where an OPP inspector and three other officers pressured her to change her evidence.

see- story

Guy Paul Morin's
case also raises suspicions. The American Bar Association notes the same pattern of using informants to implicate an innocent person in this case. DNA eventually exonerated Morin.
 
See-Morin story
See- American Bar Association document
Is there another suspect/ informant hiding in the background and avoiding an investigation by way of Police obstruction? There are many similarities between this case and Milgaard's in which a police informant was eventually found to be the killer
.
see- Morin/ Milgaard similarities
Q
uote: Both James McCloskey, founder of Centurion Ministries, a U.S. organization dedicated to freeing the wrongly convicted, and James Lockyer, one of Morin's lawyers, pointed to the similarities between different cases of unjust conviction. Prosecutorial and police misconduct are common, involving the suppression or manipulation of evidence, the willful use of jailhouse informants, and the wringing of false confessions through grueling and confusing interrogations. We should be concerned about those who are sworn to uphold the law and who knowingly send innocent persons to prison. What else is this but a crime? They kidnap an innocent person, there's forceful confinement, torture and in the case of the death penalty, conspiracy to commit murder," Ruben Carter said.
see story

Robert Baltovich, falsely convicted of murder and recently released. The new prime suspect, Paul Bernardo!
Paul Bernardo raised suspicions once again of Police obstruction for a serial rapist. Why the Police behaved in this manner is suspicious at best. Bernardo fits the profile of a protected informant, but no reports have emerged with that allegation, instead another connection keeps surfacing.
see- Bernardo Homolka's story

Comments on the book, Invisible Darkness : quote- I also found it very frustrating that the cops had all this evidence on Paul during the Scarbourough rapes, the plate numbers on his car and everything, and he was never arrested.
see- book comments 
The following story suggests a connection between Bernardo/ Karla Homolka and a powerful "religious" organization, one which many Police members, judges, lawyers, and politicians also belong to.
Quote: 

Is Freemasonry the missing piece to the puzzle of how the Police could have failed for so long to stop Bernardo, including the ignoring of repeated tips about him, that has raised so many questions in the public's mind? 

see- Bernardo obstruction story
Quote: 
-You must conceal all crimes of your brother Masons...and should you be summoned as a witness against a brother Mason be always sure to shield him...It may be perjury to do this, it is true, but you're keeping your obligations.
Ronayne
Handbook of Masonry, page 183

see
- RCMP history in Freemasonry

This website contains the names of many U.S. informants and exposes many serious crimes being committed with the same familiar pattern of obstruction ensuing. There is a great deal of information to be found here. (click the logo below and then message board on the left)


   

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