Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

'Do better': Murder victims' families react after possible remains found in landfill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Feb, 2025 05:05 PM
  • 'Do better': Murder victims' families react after possible remains found in landfill

When Elle Harris got a phone call about potential human remains found at the landfill where searchers are trying to find her mother and another slain First Nations woman, she was overcome with a sinking feeling.

"My heart dropped right down to my stomach," she told reporters Thursday. 

Since December, trained search teams, including forensic anthropologists, have been combing through debris at the Prairie Green landfill north of Winnipeg with the hopes of finding the remains of Morgan Harris and Marcedes Myran. The two women were killed at the hands of a serial killer in 2022.

The Manitoba government, which is spearheading the search with guidance from family members and First Nations leaders, announced Wednesday that suspected human remains had been discovered at the site. 

It could take weeks for coroners to make a positive identification.

Families of the women and Indigenous leaders in the province advocated for years for a search of the landfill, taking their fight to Parliament Hill and the steps of the Manitoba legislature.

Elle Harris didn't mince words when she spoke of what went through her mind when the news came. 

"To every one of you that said no (to a search), to every one of you that didn't believe in us, do better," she said while fighting back tears. 

"How can you say no to somebody's little girl? That's my mom in there."

It's believed the remains of Morgan Harris and Myran ended up at the landfill after they were killed by Jeremy Skibicki. He was convicted last year of murdering Harris, Myran and two other Indigenous women.

A trial heard he targeted the women at homeless shelters in Winnipeg and disposed of their bodies in garbage bins in his neighbourhood.

The remains of Rebecca Contois were found in a garbage bin and at a different landfill. Those of an unidentified woman Indigenous grassroots community members named Mashkode Bizhiki'ikwe, or Buffalo Woman, have not been located and police have not said where they might be.

Police and the previous Progressive Conservative government refused to search the Prairie Green landfill, citing safety concerns related to toxic materials and asbestos.

The Tories also ran advertisements in the 2023 election campaign that touted their decision to say no to a landfill search.

The NDP government, elected that year, promised a search and, in conjunction with the federal government, funded the effort that began after site preparation work was completed last year.

Relatives of Harris and Myran joined a press conference with the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs to express shock, anger and hope over the potential discovery.

"It makes my blood boil to know that they've dragged us these last two years through all this anguish, all this hurt, all this sorrow, all this fighting ... begging the government to do something, and here it happened and it's only just begun," said Melissa Robinson, cousin of Morgan Harris. 

The search was to resume Thursday.

"It angers me that if people would have just listened to us in the first place, we would have brought these women home a lot sooner. They didn't deserve to sit in that landfill for as long as they did," said Myran's sister Jorden Myran.

The leader of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs called the discovery a significant moment in the families' fight for justice. 

"It does definitely bring deep grief, but it also reinforces what we've known is that our stolen sisters deserve to be found, they deserve to be honoured and they deserve to be laid to rest with dignity," said Grand Chief Kyra Wilson. 

Elle Harris also spoke about her healing journey over the past two years.

It has been a path with heartache, setbacks and successes, she said.

She has been able to graduate high school and move out on her own. But simple things like watching a movie that has a loving family in it can bring pain.

"It's heartbreaking to know I'm never going to be able to get that," she said. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Poilievre hails B.C. byelection win for Conservatives as Liberal vote collapses

Poilievre hails B.C. byelection win for Conservatives as Liberal vote collapses
Monday's byelection in the Fraser Valley seat, which had been held by the Liberals and is traditionally closely contested, came on the day Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's ruling party was thrown into turmoil by finance minister Chrystia Freeland's resignation.

Poilievre hails B.C. byelection win for Conservatives as Liberal vote collapses

Postal employees head back to work as union challenges strike intervention

Postal employees head back to work as union challenges strike intervention
Canada Post trucks, conveyors and mail carriers are moving again after a month-long strike by more than 55,000 postal workers left letters and parcels in limbo. The Canada Industrial Relations Board ordered postal workers back on the job following hearings over the weekend to determine whether the two sides stood too far apart to reach a deal by year's end.

Postal employees head back to work as union challenges strike intervention

'Only viable path': Freeland quits cabinet, carves out new role on federal backbench

'Only viable path': Freeland quits cabinet, carves out new role on federal backbench
In a career filled with fresh milestones, Chrystia Freeland is taking up another new role: backbench member of the governing Liberal party. Freeland resigned from the federal cabinet Monday, the day she was set to present the government's fall economic statement. 

'Only viable path': Freeland quits cabinet, carves out new role on federal backbench

A list of Liberal cabinet ministers who have recently quit or don't plan to run again

A list of Liberal cabinet ministers who have recently quit or don't plan to run again
It is the latest in a string of small shuffles Trudeau has been forced to make in recent months to replace ministers who have made clear they won't be seeking re-election. Several others who indicated publicly in October that they won't run again have yet to be replaced.

A list of Liberal cabinet ministers who have recently quit or don't plan to run again

'Human error' caused spill of up to 8,000 litres of fuel off B.C.'s coast: government

'Human error' caused spill of up to 8,000 litres of fuel off B.C.'s coast: government
Human error during a fuel transfer at a fish farm off the west coast of British Columbia has resulted in a spill into the water of up to 8,000 litres of diesel. The B.C. government said in a report on its website that the spill happened Saturday at the Grieg Seafood fish farm near Zeballos, on the northwest side of Vancouver Island. 

'Human error' caused spill of up to 8,000 litres of fuel off B.C.'s coast: government

Family, friends, leaders gather at memorial for former B.C. premier John Horgan

Family, friends, leaders gather at memorial for former B.C. premier John Horgan
Up to three thousand people gathered at the Q Centre in the suburban Victoria community of Colwood for a memorial service for the former New Democrat premier and Canada's ambassador to Germany who died last month at age 65 following his third bout with cancer.

Family, friends, leaders gather at memorial for former B.C. premier John Horgan