Crown tasked with rare case of no body and no identity in alleged serial killer case
WINNIPEG — More than two weeks have passed since police laid additional murder charges against an alleged serial killer, including one for the killing of an unidentified woman whose remains have not been found.
The move to lay a first-degree murder charge against an accused when there is no body and no known identity is uncommon, legal experts say.
“That’s extremely rare,” said Brandon Trask, an assistant professor of law at the University of Manitoba.
There have been more cases where there is a known victim and no body, Trask added, but that is also rare.