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Williams describes murders in taped confession
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CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Wed. Oct. 20 2010 11:16 PM ET
Warning: This story contains details that may be disturbing to some readers
In a cold and nearly emotionless videotaped confession played Wednesday in an Ontario courtroom, disgraced Col. Russell Williams described in vivid detail how he repeatedly sexually assaulted and then killed two young women at the end of a nearly three-year crime spree.
Williams, the former commander of CFB Trenton, was questioned by police in early February, days after he raped and strangled 27-year-old Jessica Lloyd and dumped her body outside Tweed, Ont.
A judge is expected to deliver his sentence on Thursday, after which Canadian Forces officials will make a brief statement. It's expected they will act quickly to strip Williams of his rank.
Williams came to investigators' attention when he was stopped at a roadside checkpoint on Feb. 4, when police were comparing tires on SUVs to treads found outside Lloyd's home. Unbeknownst to Williams, police matched the tires on his Nissan Pathfinder to the tread marks. Three days later he was brought in for questioning, with the entire 10-hour interrogation taped by police.
At first, Williams appears relaxed and polite, dressed in a golf shirt and jeans, chewing gum and smiling at the camera.
But his interrogator eventually tells Williams of the evidence collected that points to him as Lloyd's killer and also connects him to the November 2009 death of Cpl. Marie-France Comeau, a flight attendant who once worked on a flight Williams piloted.
When Williams is informed that his Ottawa house and Tweed cottage are being searched, he realizes he's been caught.
Williams folds his arms, falls silent and thinks for several moments before answering the rest of Det.-Sgt. Jim Smyth's many questions.
Williams finally says his main concern is the effect the search and resulting revelations would have on his wife and the Canadian Forces.
"I'm struggling with how upset my wife is right now," Williams said. "I'm concerned that they are tearing apart my wife's brand new house."
"I want to, um, minimize the impact on my wife," Williams said.
"So do I," replied Smyth.
"So how do we do that?" Williams asked.
"Well, you start by telling the truth," Smyth said.
"Okay," Williams replied before asking for a map to point out where outside Tweed he had dumped Lloyd's body.
Williams also points investigators to computer files in the basement and in his office in his Ottawa home in order to spare his wife an intrusive search. The files contained thousands of images of Williams in women's and girls' lingerie, which he stole during dozens of break-and-enters in Eastern Ontario that began in 2007.
On Monday, Williams pleaded guilty to more than 80 charges related to the break-ins, as well as two counts of sexual assault and two counts of first-degree murder.
When he is later asked why he thinks "these things happened," Williams replies: "I don't know. I don't know the answers and I'm pretty sure the answers don't matter."
Jessica Lloyd
After expressing concern for his wife, Williams, in a matter-of-fact manner, detailed the gruesome late-January murder of Lloyd, a 27-year-old woman who worked at a bus company in Napanee.
He described breaking into her home and attacking her in her bed.
"I raped her," Williams said in the video.
"A rape can mean a lot of things. What took place?" the investigator countered.
Williams then went on to describe in painstaking detail the various ways he assaulted Lloyd, how he threatened her and placed zip ties around her neck to control her. He also described to police how he made Lloyd model underwear, and photographed her as she did so.
Williams said he then took her to Tweed, where he lived. The day-and-a-half-long nightmare continued with numerous rapes, photo sessions and eventually with Lloyd suffering seizures, begging for her life.
Williams, after telling Lloyd he was taking her to the hospital, finally seemed to tire of the cruel game.
"And as we were walking ... I hit her on the back of the head," he told investigators in the video, in which he often referred to her by her first name as though they were friends.
"I was surprised that her skull gave way. She was immediately unconscious and I strangled her."
After that Williams explained that he hid Lloyd's body in his garage and went to work because he was flying a military plane to California early the next day. He later returned to get rid of her body and clean up the mess.
Cpl. Marie-France Comeau
In the video shown to the courtroom, Williams also described the murder of Comeau, pronouncing her name with the correct French accent.
He admitted breaking into Comeau's home and hiding in her basement, waiting for her to fall asleep, and how she came down to the basement in search of her cat.
"So when she spotted me I had the same flashlight (and) subdued her, brought her upstairs and, uh, strangled her, well more suffocated her with some tape," he said.
Later in the video he admitted raping and photographing Comeau.
Williams explained in the video that he used duct tape to cover Comeau's mouth and nose, until she suffocated.
"I had thought about strangling her earlier...it was a short-lived attempt because she struggled quite a bit. So I decided I had to suffocate her," he said.
The reason he murdered her, he said, was that there was an obvious link to an assault he had committed on a woman who lived near him in Tweed.
When asked by investigators whether he would have continued to commit murders and sexual assaults if he hadn't been caught, Williams was ambiguous.
"I was hoping not. I can't answer that question," he said.
Williams apologizes
Also presented to court Wednesday were letters Williams wrote shortly after his confession to one of his sexual-assault victims, and to members of his victims' families.
In one letter, Williams told Lloyd's mother that her daughter loved her very much because she "told me so again and again."
Williams also apologized for "having taken your daughter from you.
"Jessica was a beautiful, gentle young woman as you know. I know she loved you very much -- she told me so again and again."
Williams said Lloyd had no idea he was going to kill her because "she believed she was going home."
In another letter, Williams told his wife he was "so very sorry for having hurt you like this," and asked her to take care of their cat, Rosie. He signed off the letter with, "I love you, Russ."
On Tuesday, Williams was formally convicted of first-degree murder in the deaths of Lloyd and Comeau, the sexual assault of two other victims, and the 82 fetish break-ins.
On Wednesday afternoon, friends and family members of the victims, as well as women who had personal items stolen during the break-ins, spoke in court about how they have been hurt by Williams's crimes.
Justice Robert Scott, who is presiding over the proceedings, instructed the media to only use the first names of those giving victim-impact statements.
A friend named Lisa said Lloyd had looked forward to being a wife and mother, and said her friend's death "completely diminished" her faith in God.
"How could he create such a monster? The very person whose job it was to protect my country was terrorizing my community," Lisa said while holding a photograph of Lloyd.
The confession video and victim-impact statements followed nearly two days of court proceedings, during which the prosecution meticulously went through all of the charges against Williams, reading the agreed statement of facts and showing photos -- some taken by Williams himself and others taken by forensic investigators.
The prosecution showed dozens of the thousands of images stored on Williams's computer, many of which showed Williams masturbating while wearing lingerie, some of which belonged to girls as young as 11.
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No one is asking Brad Wall or Dalton to ride naked with them. Asking a politician to do this is sexist pure and simple, even if he was joking.
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Merle Terlesky
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Ottawa
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Tim
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Terri
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Richard in New Brunswick
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Amber, Pembroke, Ontario
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BA in The 'Peg
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b.pick
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MD
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Carlos Munante
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hinke
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Joe
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Helga Laval
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Joe
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Joseph in Toronto
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Albertaboy111
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Ben in Okotoks
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hemusbull
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Niagara George
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Michael Dorosh, Calgary
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Jill
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It is so frightening to think that people such as this guy actually are walking amongst us, seemingly the "ordinary" guy --hard to trust anyone anymore!I can't bare to think of the horrors these two young girls experienced before their deaths. Capital punishment would be the answer for him --that way society would not have to care for him --sorry I don't feel sorry for his wife --she supposedly is trying to sue the Ottawa police for new hardwood floors in her new Westboro home --she blames the police for scratching the hardwood when they were searching it --if I was her I would sell that house and and stay quiet for a long time --
Will
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Prof. Pye Chartt
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Amy Pio, North York, ON
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Cheryl
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Greg
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Dr. James Bradford
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Lee
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AT
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jack
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Blind by choice...
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hopeful
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Prof. Pye Chartt
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Dan in Regina
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SM
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Samantha
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JP
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viral venus
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Shannon
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noreen
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I disagree with rehashing all the details.It hurts the families,it is not something that the general public esp children need to see splashed all over the media & it probably gives Col. Williams a reliving of his sexual feelings. The less said the better
Tom
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reece
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Mike in Mississauga
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Janice-Kitchener,ontario
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Anne M
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somber
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Anne M
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CrackerJackLee
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Deckard
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B in Toronto
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jordanh
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Anne
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CSC Gaurd
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A) He will spend the rest of his life heavily segregated from the rest of the prison population, as is Bernardo and his ilk.
B) Segregation means only having access to medical personnel and case management personnel, most of whom will despise him.
C) When I was a guard we ate the food the prisoners ate. It is nutritious but far from good.
D) He will have access to books and television and a computer should he decide to purchase one, but no internet, little access to most software titles.
E) For this type of inmate a sentence of life w/o parole for 25 years means LIFE. He will never be released, nor lowered to a security level of less than maximum, with only an hour or so out of his cell a day.
Most of the "lifers" I managed wished they had received the death penalty.
This sentence, while seemingly light, is possibly worse than a death sentence.
Donny in Edmonton
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KL
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Military Wife
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Retired Sgt
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Mike from Pembroke
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LC in Borden ON
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NoJusticefound
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Paul ~ Kitchener
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Josh
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Confused
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John Ross
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regardkess of his crime, his poension was worked for and vested. It is his. while his crime is heinous, his pension is not a matter for this court.
If politicians do a knee jerk reaction and make a law clawing it back then a further injustice will be done. we may not like teh murderers, but up untiol teh point when they are convicted, they worked, put in their time. perhaps we should strip other worers rights fromn all criminals as well. They paid into the benefits, they get to collect them unless you can convince a judge otherwise .
Grace, Ontario
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laurapo
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Its sick and terrifying. It makes me want to stay inside and deadbolt every door.
shawbrooke
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esso
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Bob,Calgary
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Louise
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Jake
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CDN
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RJ in Halifax
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Gilbert in Ottawa
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Terry
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J MacKinnon, Oakville.
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I understand why all the sordid details must be read into the public record. God help us if this person ever sees the light of day again.
Intelligent Liberal
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Wendy
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Cam
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mr.obvious moncton nb
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JS
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Lena
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POSS65
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Prof. Pye Chartt
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Eric
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Dr. James Bradford
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AT
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Gary in vermont
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Kevin
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CYL
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