Canadian pleads guilty to murders of eight men

Former landscaper Bruce McArthur admits killing victims with links to Toronto’s gay village

Police investigate a home that accused serial killer Bruce McArthur worked at in Toronto, Canada, in July 2018. File photograph: Carlo Allegri/Reuters
Police investigate a home that accused serial killer Bruce McArthur worked at in Toronto, Canada, in July 2018. File photograph: Carlo Allegri/Reuters

A former landscaper accused of killing and dismembering men he met in Toronto’s Gay Village district has pleaded guilty to eight counts of first-degree murder.

Bruce McArthur, wearing a black sweater, stood up and said “guilty” to eight times as the charges were read.

Sentencing will start on February 4th.

Police last year found the remains of seven of the men in large planters at a property where McArthur had worked.

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The remains of the eighth victim were found in a ravine behind the same property in midtown Toronto.

The prosecutor, Michael Cantlon, said the cases ranging from 2010-2017 involved sexual assault or forcible confinement and said the bodies were hidden and dismembered.

Several of the victims were apparently strangled.

Crown attorney Michael Cantlon leaves court after Bruce McArthur pleaded guilty to the murders of eight men who had disappeared over several years, in Toronto, Canada. Photograph: Chris Helgren/Reuters
Crown attorney Michael Cantlon leaves court after Bruce McArthur pleaded guilty to the murders of eight men who had disappeared over several years, in Toronto, Canada. Photograph: Chris Helgren/Reuters

McArthur (67) moved to the Toronto area around 2000 and previously lived in a suburb where he was married, raised two children and worked as a travelling salesman of underwear and socks.

His landscaping business was small, but he periodically hired workers, including a 40-year-old man who disappeared in 2010.

Police set up a special taskforce to look into the disappearances of men in the Gay Village area of Toronto shortly after some went missing.

McArthur was arrested six months later.

The alleged victims fit a pattern.

Most were of Middle Eastern or south Asian descent and lived on the margins of Canadian society, their disappearances attracting little attention.

One victim hid the fact that he was gay from his Muslim family.

Another was a recent immigrant with a drug problem.

Another alleged victim was homeless, smoked crack cocaine and worked as a prostitute.

But then Andrew Kinsman vanished.

The 49-year-old LGBQT activist and former bartender in Toronto had many friends.

When he suddenly went missing the day after Toronto’s gay pride parade, his friends noticed quickly, and so did the police.

Police set up another special taskforce to look into the disappearances of men in the Gay Village shortly after Mr Kinsman went missing.

Members of the LGBTQ community were long voicing concerns about a potential serial killer and pushing for answers in light of the disappearances, which were deemed suspicious.

An initial police taskforce in 2012 did not lead to an arrest. – AP