Handwritten letters penned by admitted serial killer Jeremy Skibicki entered as evidence
CTV
A year after admitted serial killer Jeremy Skibicki was arrested for killing four Indigenous women, investigators learned he was writing to a ‘pen pal’ inmate in Nova Scotia – handwritten letters that are now being entered as evidence in his trial.
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A year after admitted serial killer Jeremy Skibicki was arrested for killing four Indigenous women, investigators learned he was writing to a ‘pen pal’ inmate in Nova Scotia – handwritten letters that are now being entered as evidence in his trial.
Skibicki, 37, is standing trial for the deaths of four Indigenous women: Rebecca Contois, Morgan Harris, Marcedes Myran, and an unidentified woman Indigenous leaders have named Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe or Buffalo Woman.
The Crown alleges Skibicki preyed on these women at Winnipeg homeless shelters, invited them back to his apartment where he assaulted them, often sexually, and killed them. The court heard he then disposed of the women’s remains in nearby garbage bins and dumpsters.
Contois’ partial remains were found in garbage bins near Skibicki’s North Kildonan apartment on May 16, 2022. He was arrested the following day.
In the hours after his arrest, while being interviewed by homicide detectives, Skibicki admitted to killing Contois, along with three other women. In a video of that interview, later played as evidence in his trial, Skibicki told the detectives in detail how he killed the women and defiled their bodies. Two of the women, Skibicki said he dismembered in his apartment bathtub.
Skibicki was charged with four counts of first-degree murder.