Jeremy Skibicki has pleaded not guilty to four first-degree murder charges.
A Winnipeg man who killed four women in 2022 was seen on video surveillance footage with them in the days and hours before they died — including eating a meal a shelter, buying groceries and walking through a parking lot near the apartment where he later killed them, his trial heard Monday. At his trial on Monday, court saw him in video surveillance footage with each of his four victims.
Contois was a member of O-Chi-Chak-Ko-Sipi First Nation, also known as Crane River, on the western shore of Lake Manitoba. Harris and Myran were both members of Long Plain First Nation in south-central Manitoba.Skibicki unexpectedly confessed to killing all four women when police questioned him after his arrest in May 2022. During his interrogation, Skibicki detailed how he killed each woman and then put their remains in the trash.
Another video taken after police believe Harris was killed shows Skibicki in the back lane where he later told police he'd disposed of her body. In that video from the night of May 3, court heard, he was seen wheeling a residential garbage bin up to a commercial dumpster and emptying its contents — which appear to be wrapped in black plastic — inside.
The hat and shoes she was seen wearing in those videos were also later recovered by police during their search of Skibicki's apartment, court heard.Another video played in court, from the night of May 6, 2022, showed Skibicki again pulling a wheeled garbage bin to dump its contents into the same dumpster where prosecutors say he put Harris's remains.
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