Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 On February 23, 1995, Bill Wilson, who made his living as a woodcarver and handyman, was on his way to get some water from a narrow slough that ran along the south side of the Lougheed Highway, close to the mouth of the Stave River. He spotted a human skull about forty or fifty feet away.
#2 The skull was sent to Corporal Tim Sleigh, a young detective in the RCMP’s Investigative Section in Vancouver. He was intrigued by the skull, which looked as if it had been cut in half with an electric saw.
#3 The skull of the woman was sent to Tracy Rogers, a forensic anthropologist at the University of Toronto, who was able to reconstruct her face. No one was reported missing who matched her description, though, so she remained Jane Doe for years.
#4 The Pickton brothers, among their many interests, were in the dirt-moving business. Their shabby white clapboard farmhouse needed painting and repair, and the wooden outbuildings seemed on the verge of collapse. The family attended church services at St. Catherine’s Anglican Church in Port Coquitlam.