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Arrests offer no relief to Tori's parents' nightmare
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Angela Mulholland, CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Wed. May. 20 2009 5:42 PM ET
The parents of Victoria "Tori" Stafford are living every parent's worst nightmare now that charges have been laid against two people alleged to have stolen and murdered their little girl.
With details still sketchy, it appears Tori was snatched away in broad daylight outside her school and killed within hours. The suspects apparently abducted Tori for "nefarious" purposes, choosing her for no other reason than that she was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Every parent lives in fear of losing their children and few can bear the thought of their children being the victim of sexual predators. But even before Tori's parents' learned their daughter's fate, they'd been living a hell that began the day she went missing, April 8.
From that first day, the attentions of both police and the news media were squarely on the parents. Rumours -- often vicious -- swirled about them, with many of their past indiscretions being dredged up and broadcast by suspicious neighbours.
Tori's mother, Tara McDonald, found herself being asked questions that no parent dealing with the grief of a lost child wants to answer. There were rumours about drug addictions and talk about crippling debts to biker gangs.
McDonald insisted the rumours were all lies.
"I haven't done drugs since high school. Who doesn't smoke weed in high school? But not after that," she said on May 15. "I don't care what people say, but this is taking the attention away from Tori. Nothing except finding Tori matters right now."
Four weeks later, McDonald admitted to reporters she has battled an addiction to OxyContin and has taken part in methadone treatment.
McDonald, her boyfriend, Tori's father, Rodney Stafford, and other close family members tried to clear up suspicions by taking lie detector tests over the Easter weekend. But when police refused to comment on the tests and Tori's family wouldn't discuss the full results, suspicions only grew.
Reporters struggled to tell the story as they were both stonewalled by police reticent to release critical information and bombarded by "tips" from suspicoius residents of a town of 35,000, where everyone is said to know everyone.
Strangely, the one woman no one seemed to know was the woman on the surveillance video, seen walking away with a happy-looking Tori. Nor did anyone seem to know the woman depicted in a police sketch released more than two weeks into the disappearance. The fact that the suspect looked a bit like Tara MacDonald didn't help deflect attention away from her.
"It looks nothing like me," the mother of two insisted to reporters outside her home April 22. "Quit pointing a finger at me. Quit pointing fingers at everybody else, until there's somebody that we can point a finger at."
Though she insisted: "At the end of the day, I know that I had nothing to do with this," McDonald's every move -- from holding daily "press conferences" outside her home, to wearing sparkly eyeshadow during those briefings -- further fuelled rumours.
McDonald even had to respond to accusations that she didn't appear a grieving mother and hadn't been showing enough emotion during her daily "briefings."
"There's times where I sit in my house and I bawl my eyes out -- I curl up in a ball and I sob," she responded. "People have asked many times, 'Why aren't you crying, why aren't you showing emotion?' I don't do it out here. I do it in there with my friends and family, with people who can console me."
Many scratched their heads with McDonald later told the bizarre tale of a mysterious benefactor who had whisked her away to a hotel by limousine and offered to front the money from ransom demands that never came.
When reporters later asked her about skeptics who questioned her story about the benefactor, McDonald responded that Woodstock was "full of stories and rumours and crap."
"People watch the 1 p.m. press conference and make up their own stories," she said.
"A lot of weird things have taken place. A lot of weird messages, a lot of weird letters," McDonald went on to say. "[The limo ride] was no more any weird than anything else we have encountered so far."
As if the speculations of nosy neighbours and reporters trying to get their story weren't enough, Tori's parents had to contend with a police investigation they decided was ineffective.
They raged as the Oxford Community Police Department continued to label the abduction of their daughter a "missing persons" case, even a week after their girl had been gone. They struggled to understand why police didn't seem to be looking beyond them for other suspects.
But police were likely following the advice of experts on missing children cases, who know all too well that stranger abductions are statistically rare.
In 2007, of the 60,582 children reported missing in Canada, only 56 were kidnapped by someone other than the children's parents. The vast majority of the rest were runaways.
Former Toronto Police Supt. Gary Ellis says experience tells police to focus first on people close to the child.
"I always teach that the first place you look -- and percentage-wise in my own experience and what I have seen -- is that usually it is someone very, very close geographically and within the family," Ellis told CTV Newsnet Wednesday, as word of the arrests came down.
"It's very, very seldom that it's someone else in the rest of the world."
He says in cases of a stranger abduction, police need to work fast in the first two days after a disappearance if they hope to recover the child alive.
"The first 48 hours are critical. That's when the person has committed the act and then there's scrambling to make sense of the nonsense they've created. They're running around trying to cover up the evidence, trying to dispose of remains and build up their alibi and all sorts of things. And that's when they're most vulnerable, that's when they make mistakes."
"Unfortunately, the abductions of children that I've been involved in have been mostly sexual in nature, and the child has been dead within an hour."
In the case of Tori Stafford, it appears that some of those lessons may have been borne out.
Now, facing the arraignment and trial of their little girl's murderer and abductors, Tori's parents' nightmare is not over. It has only begun its next chapter.
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This is just wrong but if I were to send something to the politicians I would have sent the brain!
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Ed in Ontario
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The people who did this should be punished severely. Canada should have the death penalty for child killers.
Law Student
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Even those who do plan ahead, they say "they'll never catch me" (which the evidence shows is true, most crimes go unsolved), "they'll never press charges" (many cases do not have enough evidence to go to trial even after a suspect has been arrested), or "they'll never convict me" (a good percentage of accused are acquitted).
The only reason for the death penalty is that it prevents serial killers (you kill this one child, we'll kill you and you won't kill any more children), but the same is true of jail. They can't hurt any more children while in jail.
If you say the purpose is an "eye for an eye" than what happens when we execute the wrong person (people accused of murder get jury trials and juries get it wrong a lot)? Who do their parents/family kill?
A desturbed mother
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Dave Hammond, Cobourg On.
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When are we going to bring back the death penalty in this country for such heinous crimes as this one. An innocent child led off after school and then killed for no reason. It sickens me, and what do the courts do? Try to protect the culprits rights. They have no rights. They should bring back capital punishment or better, the whip or the cane.
Daniel in Toronto
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Law Student
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1 The police could NOT have issued an amber alert. Amber alerts go out over the radio, signs on highways, etc. You need info such as a suspect description (the video wasn't available immediately) / vehicle description / license plate #. Otherwise how do ppl who see/hear the alert know who to look for? An amber alert here wouldve been useless
2 Calling the case a missing person instead of an abduction makes no difference. Cops look for the child, make it a priority, & follow every lead. Because all the cops & everyone else want is the child home safe
3 This is 1st degree murder. If the judge finds them guilty, the judge can't decide a light/harsh punishment. It's automatically LIFE in jail without parole for 25 years. They dont automatically get parole - they have to apply/qualify. If paroled, theyll have such strict conditions that if they arent rehabilitated (which many say is impossible & I agree in this type of crime), if they even look at another child, theyll be back in jail for the rest of their lives. Also, some ppl are saying faint "hope clause & out in 15" but that clause has never been used
4 The last person executed in Cda was innocent. You cant use the death penalty when its guilty beyond reasonable doubt, not beyond all doubt. What if we find out later that someone else did it? Then the state has taken an innocent life. But if its beyond all doubt, no one'll ever be convicted. Life in prison is the best solution. They cant hurt anyone else, but if we find out we're wrong, we free them
Holly
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One thing for sure, she did keep us all focused on Tori's dissapearance, no one can argue that and as for her personal life, who cares really as long as she was a good mother, that is all that matters. In closing and thinking about this terribly tragedy and the animals who dimmed Tori's light, may they receive all the suffering that they have coming to them as they do not deserve any less. My thoughts are with the family and I offer my condolences and prayers.
Richard L. Provencher
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Gail Jones
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kebere mengesha
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Vi
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Statistics are statistics for a reason. That reason being that there is a higher probability of one event over another because EVIDENCE has demonstrated that probability. Statistics are not based upon impressions as comments sometimes are e.g. "Although "stranger abductions" are rare, they are becoming more numerous lately because criminals are realizing they are much more difficult to solve."
There is no evidence to back up this assertion other than more crime dramas on t.v. making it seem as though this is true. The police have to follow what the most likely scenario is. Maybe the argument can be that the parents should have been cleared earlier than they were but none of us were investigators in the case and none of us know the FACTS of what actually transpired. While crimes are terrible, lying and/or hiding things, even if you think they do not relate to the crime often make you appear guilty b/c you are not being honest (case in point admit to drug use. Do not hide it. It will come out and the weeks spent focusing on it b/c the police think you are lying about something can be used to actually find someone who is lying about the case itself). Crime isn't convenient, you cannot pick and choose what to reveal; it is an parasite that doesn't care what is relevant to finding the answer, it destroys no matter what.
Finally, to revisit police training in the manner suggested by some comments would require a cash infusion into all levels of policing, where will that money come from? You?
R&R in Kingston
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Second, just so we are clear on punishment, unless there is a collosal screw up by the justice system (e.g., the rare case of Karla) there will be a first degree murder conviction. This means no eligibility for parole until you have served 25 years. It does not mean released after 25 years. the majority of sexual predators who murder do not ever see the light of day, despite being eligible for parole.
khan
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The Honourable Robert Douglas Nicholson
Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada
284 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0H8
(no postage necessary)
bill
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My heart goes out the the family i'm so sorry
Angela
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God why?
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Sad parent
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concerned parent
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realitycheck
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Remember we live in a free country with that said we all have rights to privacy. A cop can not just barge into your house because of a tip.
If you don't like how the cops handled things then look at our legal system and our demands for privacy.
Fact is some messed up chick abducted a child she knew, for reasons we don't know. What we do know she was killed for someone's sick pleasure.
Both defendents if found quilty should pay an equal penalty. I would like to see death, but being it is not available. THey should have to spend the equivilant to Tori life expectancy in jail.
An lastly, yes, I do believe drugs played heavily into this crime. Smoking weed is a gateway drug.
Kate, Alberta
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Had an Amber alert been issued - Tori may have come home alive.
Mrs. Mary Kaus
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Alex
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Elias Nasrallah
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Selina
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Mary-Jane
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Rob
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daver66
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My condolences to the family.
Zand
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I will say that, as an outsider, some of the events that transpired and were reported by the media seemed a little peculiar, but because Tara McDonald showed no emotion in front of the press automatically makes her suspicious? What an absolutely horrid thing to say.
I cannot even being to imagine what will happen to those so intimately effected by this horrific tragedy. I can only guess that there will be endless amounts of "What if's" and "I should have's."
I applaud the police services in not giving into the public's "need to know" and instead protect the remaining integrity of this case to ensure a trial by judge and jury, not the media.
T in AB
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Unless you are privy to the police investigation internal process, you can't judge. You have no idea what leads they had, what tips they were following or what reasons they pursued for their investigation.
While I am truly sickened by this horrible event - the parents didn't report right away, and in most cases the child is killed within hours. Then add on the child left happy with the person in the video, and it did not appear to be an abduction initially.
Finally, Amber Alert requires specific circumstances to be used, or it would be overused and ignored by the public. this case didn't seem to fit I guess...
Rather than criticize the police without all the facts, perhaps we should focus on what we as a society can do to better raise our kids to not have the sickos that we seem to have more of these days.
C.F. from Montreal
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Ian
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Josie Turner
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Hurst will be out at age 43. Mr Rafferty, if found guilty, will be out at age 53.
Both Naiomi and Tori suffered horrific deaths. Both perpetrators will live on and be free to have kids of their own.
In the U.S. they would be jailed for 70+ years, or executed, and sentences are consecutive, not concurrent, as we have in our liberalized, some might say inadequate, justice system. The victims deserve the justice that some of them probably died wishing for.
Josie Turner
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John Jemmett
liz mary
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Patti
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I am a parent that went to Oliver Stephens today to pick up my child. Just to let everyone know, the school has been great with the kids through this whole ordeal. Today the kids had the choice of going home, and parents came to get them.
As I was waiting for my son, it was so sad to see the smaller children (who likely were from Tori class) sitting there with mom or dad and just tears streaming down their faces...asking questions of WHY..
Wow what a day for the parents and teachers and most of all the kids at the school today. God Bless the all!!
A huge thank you to the principal and staff for a job that is likely one of the toughest ones you will ever have to do.. You guys were great.
(school is offering support for all the kids, in the next toughest weeks)
LaCyn
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Sad Parent
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whatever
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another concerend parent
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Daniel Hertzman
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Sandra
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They are nothing more than a bunch of small town cops.
Where was the Amber Alert on the day she went missing.
They should hang their heads in shame.
Ginette Gauthier
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JerseyGirl
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Shan
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I hope those involved get punished with tougher jail sentence than 7-8 years max inside.
Nikki
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no news means speculation and gossip
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With the lack of info coming out of the police and only the family daily news brief(which would get a bit weird)you cannot blame people for hearing or repeating speculation or idle gossip...it's human nature during this time of living.
Let's all just hope that justise is done and that the two people oinvloved run into a very tough judge.
parent
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Prison is rough, especially for those who go in with charges having to do with violence/sexual assault towards children.
Jonathan
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It appears the 18 year old female accomplice has testified to police. It appears that there has been a body found north of Guelph in Rockwood, and that police are assuming it's the body of Tori Stafford.
There is no way to describe the horror, tragedy and revulsion that I feel right now. I think of my own 4 year old daughter in daycare and can't imagine the nightmare that Tara and Rodney have had to endure and will have to endure now that they know Tori was brutally abused and murdered.
I just hope that there is some sense of justice and these animals never see the light of day again. They've stolen Tori's light.
Concerned Parent, Fort Saskatchewan, AB
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C. Victoria BC
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My heart just breaks for Tori's family.
parent
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I just hope that little angel comes home safe, and those two, if found guilty, get the worst possible sentence ever.
island girl
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