![Calls grow for Winnipeg police to search landfill for victims of alleged serial killer](https://www.ctvnews.ca/content/dam/ctvnews/en/images/2022/12/6/contois-harris-myran-1-6183410-1670363768254.jpg)
Calls grow for Winnipeg police to search landfill for victims of alleged serial killer
CTV
Calls are growing louder for Winnipeg police to reconsider a decision not to search a landfill for the remains of two Indigenous women.
Calls are growing louder for Winnipeg police to reconsider a decision not to search a landfill for the remains of two Indigenous women.
Officers believe the remains of Marcedes Myran, 26, and Morgan Harris, 39, were taken to the Prairie Green Landfill just north of Winnipeg earlier this year.
Investigators said they’re both victims of alleged serial killer Jeremy Skibicki, 35, but police believe there's no hope of a successful recovery.
The decision not to proceed with a search for the women’s remains isn't sitting well with Jeannie White Bird, co-chair of the Manitoba MMIWG2S Family and Survivor Coalition.
"It's unconscionable," White Bird said during an interview in Selkirk, Man.
The Winnipeg Police Service (WPS) explained Tuesday too much time passed and too many truckloads of garbage and construction clay had been dumped at Prairie Green by the time they became aware Myran, who they believe was killed on or about May.4, 2022, and Harris, who they believe was killed on or about May 1, 2022, were potentially at the site.
White Bird said she's thinking of their families.