Canadian True Crime - 134 The Murder of January Lapuz
Episode Date: April 17, 2023In 2012, a beloved community figure was killed in her own home in an extremely violent attack. It would take a while to learn what happened to her and who was responsible, but the immense loss of her ...absence was felt immediately by all who knew her - or knew of her."Hi. My name is January. I know it's a cold month, but I make it hot!"CONTENT WARNING:This episode is about the death of a transgender person, and it also includes brief details of Indigenous trauma and residential schools. 24/7 Crisis Line for Indian Residential School Survivors: call 1-800-721-0066More information:Kelly Favro / Publican Ban: GoFundMe (for those able to donate financially).About January: Watch My Name Was January, Sher Vancouver, Sher Vancouver Podcast and Youth AwardFull list of resources, information sources, and credits: See the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodesCTC Episode 50: The Murder of Tracy Tom Canadian True Crime donates monthly to help those facing injustice.This month we have donated to the Sher Vancouver LGBTQ+ Friends SocietyListen ad-free and early:CTC premium feeds are available on Amazon Music - included with Prime, Apple Podcasts, Patreon and Supercast. Credits:Special thanks to Alex Sangha and Ash Brar from Sher Vancouver.Research: Eliot NewtonWriting, sound design, additional research: Kristi LeeAudio editing and production, theme songs: We Talk of DreamsProduction assistance: Jesse HawkeScript consulting: Carol WeinbergDisclaimer voiced by Erik Krosby Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Canadian True Crime is a completely independent production, funded mainly through advertising.
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Hi everyone, I hope you're well. I've got two things to talk about before we start. One is a
short message and another is a bit of a longer message. Many of you have asked me if there's
any way to help Callie Favreau and the other survivors in their fight to have changes made
to the whole publication ban's issue. If you can join us in donating financially,
they've launched a GoFundMe to help them get to Parliament in a few weeks to see the outcome of
all their hard work. Many live on Vancouver Island and it's not cheap or easy to get to Ottawa,
so if you're able to help, please see a link to the GoFundMe in the show notes.
The second thing I wanted to talk about starts with an additional content warning.
This episode is about the killing of a transgender person and it also includes
brief mention of Indigenous trauma and residential schools. See the show notes for details of a 24
hour crisis line. This episode was in the works before one of the recent mass shootings in the
United States that stoke to the growing fire of anti-transgender hatred. And I briefly considered
postponing this episode for a while, but I realize that it just doesn't matter. I've tried to fight
the misinformation and conspiracy theories outright hypocrisy, disingenuous and strawman
arguments about trans people and the so-called trans agenda, but it makes no difference. I've
tried countering with data and statistics and good faith arguments, but I've realized that that
doesn't matter either. We are living in a post-truth world where we believe we have to pick aside,
a team, whether based on politics or religion or ideology, demographics or something else.
And once we've picked that team or teams, we feel compelled to defend whatever that team says or
does, while criticizing whatever the other team says or does point blank. We take our team allegiances
so personally that there's little room for independent or critical thought. And right now,
several of these teams are on the warpath against the trans community. An entire group of individuals
is being targeted, portrayed as some kind of group-think militia who are out to ruin our lives
with their evil agendas. Here's the thing, every single group has bad eggs. None of us are perfect
and that includes trans people. We are all human beings and the vast majority of us are just trying
to survive. When it comes to what these anti-trans groups are actually advocating for, there is no
need to follow their arguments to a logical conclusion because they've started saying it out loud.
They want transgender people gone from public life. They're working their way towards genocide
and it is deeply disturbing. But also, it's a distraction from what's really going on. In the
last few years, no one can deny that life has gotten harder than we ever imagined. And we're
exhausted, irritable, miserable. There's a feeling of discontent, a void that we just can't quite
put our finger on. That uncomfortable feeling is worry for our future, as well as those of our
children and grandchildren. And it's only natural to want to look for a scapegoat, someone to blame.
I know there'll be people listening who will assign political motivations to what I'm saying.
So I want to make it very clear that even though I think it's important to vote in elections and
I always do, I am not on any of the teams. I don't support any political party and I don't
even adhere to a particular ideology because I'm always learning and taking new perspectives
into consideration. What I do believe in is improvement, fairness, honesty, transparency
and the truth, even when it's inconvenient for me or difficult to hear. This world is becoming
more of a dystopia by the day and we are most definitely getting screwed here. But it's not
by trans people or any other targeted minority group. Trans people are not to blame for the cost
of living crisis that many of us are experiencing. They're not to blame for the fact that grocery
store CEOs are claiming inflation as an excuse for the sharp increases in the price of food,
yet refusing to increase the minimum wage of workers so they can keep up with that inflation.
And they're still making billions in revenue, giving themselves fat bonuses and pay increases.
Why do they rally against protections for workers like paid sick days and increased
safety standards while continuing to pay massive dividends to their shareholders?
It's governments, all of them, that allow this to happen. And while we're all down here slinging
mud at each other while we try to survive, we're not paying attention to politicians who gaslight
us by saying they're here to support us all. Yet their actions demonstrate their allegiances lie
with the groups that have the money to influence them. And it is not trans people with the money.
We have to ask ourselves, why has housing become so unaffordable that tent cities are popping up
everywhere and we don't even know if our own children will ever be able to move out, let alone
by their own home? Why are government elites able to get away with sitting on giant piles of money,
pointing fingers at each other and exchanging gifts and special deals with wealthy donors,
while our public health and education systems crumble? Why is it that many Canadians who are
disabled, mentally ill or living in poverty, find it far easier to access medically assisted death
than it is to access the basic human needs and services that can help them keep living?
It's brutal and I could go on for much longer but I'm tired too. I don't enjoy conflict and
making people angry and I've taken far longer to write this than the time I had available.
I'm sorry it's been so long and I wish I had a solution. But while we're all fighting with
each other about things that amount to absolute bullshit and blindly believing and defending
our favourite politicians or talking heads, instead of thinking critically about what they're
saying and doing, this situation is only going to get worse. So before we start today's episode
about the murder of a transgender person, I wanted to send strength and support to all our
trans listeners and friends. Like all humans, your existence is valid. You deserve respect and love
and empathy and it costs me absolutely nothing to give that to you. Except RIP my reviews.
If you're angry, have at it, go for gold but please note this has been a sincere authentic
message that I feel is necessary at this time. And hey, it's my podcast after all.
Thanks for listening and speaking of which, it's on with the show.
It was September 29th, 2012 and a resident of the city of New Westminster in the Metro
Vancouver region of British Columbia was entertaining a friend. At about 10pm that
Saturday night, they were suddenly alerted to some loud noises coming from a nearby home.
Together, they went over to check if everything was okay. When they got to the front door,
they were confronted with a bloody scene and what looked to be the end of a struggle between two
people on the floor, one holding a red stained knife above the other. Before there was time to
process what was happening, the man holding the knife spotted them. He jumped up and ran towards
the door threatening the neighbour's friend with it on the way out. They immediately called 9-1-1,
reporting a victim of a serious stabbing incident needing medical assistance and an assailant that
had fled the scene with the knife. Their neighbour was lying on the floor, surrounded by blood,
but she was still alive. As the ambulance rushed her off to hospital, the neighbours who found her
described the assailant to the police. Since he'd fled on foot with a knife, perhaps he was still in
the area. As it turned out, he was long gone. It would take more than two months to locate him
and even longer to figure out what had happened that night.
Just over four years earlier in 2008, Canadian social worker Alex Sanger had an idea to start a
not-for-profit. As a member of Vancouver's Punjabi Sikh community, Alex had experienced
cultural pressures to follow a set life path, get married, have kids and live what's considered a
normal heterosexual lifestyle. When he came out as gay, he had the love and support of his mother,
but he knew many others weren't so fortunate. They felt ostracised and alienated by their families
and communities, and he wanted to do something to support them. So in 2008, he founded Share
Vancouver, a non-profit and registered charity for LGBTQ plus South Asians. Share means lion in
many South Asian languages, a symbol of courage, pride, bravery and strength. Alex relied on a
small group of friends to help him get the organisation up and running, including Ash Bra,
who today serves as president. But they needed all the help they could get, and in early 2009,
Ash came to Alex with some exciting news. He had just met someone fabulous.
Ash said he was on the bus when a woman hopped on that he immediately recognised
as being Filipina. Ash was also from the Philippines and couldn't resist the opportunity
to speak to her into garlog. The woman responded in kind with a sparkle in her eye,
and the two started chatting as the bus pulled away from the curb.
She said her name was January. She was 23 years old, and as Ash would later learn,
she had led an interesting life. January was born in April of 1986 in Santiago,
Isabella, in the Philippines, and when she was 18 years old, she immigrated to Canada.
But she wasn't born with that name. At some point in her life, she realised she was a trans woman,
and by the time she met Ash Bra on the bus five years later, she had legally changed her name
to January Marie LaPouse and was proudly living as her authentic self. And it showed,
January had a joyful, vibrant energy that was infectious. Ash and January quickly became
best friends, and he soon introduced her to Alex Senga and brought her into the fold at
Chervenkova. Everyone loved her extroverted, goofy, larger-than-life personality and the way
she was able to laugh at herself while complimenting those around her. It was clear to all that
January wanted people to feel comfortable in her presence.
Chervenkova was starting to further their local community outreach by putting on events.
In January soon became the perfect MC, effortlessly getting the small crowds going with dancing,
singing and making them laugh. The organisation's founders, Alex Senga and Ash Bra,
didn't know if many people would attend some of their events, but January was like a magnet.
In just a few short months, they saw more and more new people showing up just because of January.
She was literally a highlight. People came just to see her, and word was starting to spread.
But for all of January's joy and vibrancy, she dealt with difficulties and internal struggles,
which likely included the knowledge that she had been bought and sold as a baby.
When January was just two months old, her birth mother sold her to another Filipino woman,
Betty Lapuz. In later interviews, Betty would say she paid 1,000 Philippine pesos for the baby,
an amount she estimated to be the equivalent of less than 10 Canadian dollars. Under Philippine
law, this is a legal black market adoption, punishable by life in prison and hefty fines.
But the illegal sale of newborn babies was widespread among women, particularly those
living below the poverty line in the country's poorest communities. And they still are today,
with babies being reportedly sold on Instagram and Facebook, or in Manila's slums, the makeshift
home of approximately 4.5 million homeless people. Access to birth control is one of many factors
that come into play, but it wasn't that these mothers didn't want their babies. In most cases,
they literally couldn't afford them and had other mouths to feed. It may have been their only
realistic choice. But for those babies, as they grew up, that knowledge or context about the
circumstances in which they were adopted or sold doesn't make it any easier to come to grips with.
Alex Sanger would say that January never really felt full love or acceptance.
Another problem she experienced was finding employment. After she immigrated to Canada,
she lived in poverty in Vancouver's downtown east side, one of the city's oldest neighbourhoods and
the historic heart of the city. The downtown east side is also known for disproportionately
high levels of homelessness, poverty, crime, hazardous use of drugs and alcohol, mental
illness and sex work, a complex set of circumstances that allowed convicted serial murderer Robert
Picton to use the area as his personal hunting ground for as long as he did.
It should also be noted that the downtown east side is known for its artistic contributions and
strong community resilience, something that January was known to take part in by giving
generously and often to people living in the area who needed it. January relied on survival
sex work to pay her bills, also known as street or outdoor sex work. It's usually the last resort
for people in extreme need and can be extremely dangerous. Alex Sanger would say he tried to talk
January out of survival sex work, but she would shoot back, are you going to pay my groceries?
Are you going to pay my rent? How am I going to survive? January told him that she'd tried many
times to get a more conventional job, but no one would hire her. She figured it was because she
looked so obviously different. This is a common experience for transgender and non-binary people
in Canada. Even though they're often well educated, their unemployment rate is almost three times higher
than that of the broader Canadian population, and almost half of them live either below the poverty
line or very close to it. And if they do manage to land a so-called normal job, they bear the
brunt of violence and harassment both within and outside of the workplace. A 2022 report by the
Canadian Labour Congress found that almost three-quarters of transgender respondents reported
facing sexual harassment and violence at work. So January decided to take her chances and stick
to survival sex work, at least for now. Meanwhile, her volunteer work with Cher Vancouver was so
successful that she was soon named the organisation's social coordinator, becoming the first transgender
person to hold an executive position. January welcomed new members, connected them to information
and support services and helped organise and plan social activities and events, a perfect role for
her personality. She was thrilled, and the organisation's founder, Alex Sanger, would say it was
quote, the first time in her life that someone gave her a chance. But really, it was Cher Vancouver
that was lucky. January would take to the streets with Ash Bra, the man she met on the bus,
who was now her best friend. The pair were almost inseparable, talking up their events,
putting up posters, selling tickets, educating people, with January confidently chatting to
anyone and everyone she came across. Alex Sanger would recount that when January introduced herself
to new people on the street, she would often charm and disarm them by saying quote, hi,
hi, my name is January, I know it's a cold month, but I make it hot.
And when the events were happening, she was there to make sure everything went smoothly
and everyone felt comfortable. Cher Vancouver had initiated a fun social event called Bollywood
Nights, and after January started performing as Beyonce, the crowds grew and grew. By 2012,
she had become a known figure in the local pride parade. When the float won the most
diverse award one year, January had been credited with being the primary reason.
Through her volunteer work with Cher Vancouver and the connection she'd made,
a whole new world of possibilities had opened up for her. She had taken some makeup artistry
courses and was considering going back to school, but she still relied on sex work to pay her bills.
Instead of doing outside survival work on the downtown east side, though,
January was now seeing clients in her new home in New Westminster. She was always
upfront about the fact that she was transgender. It was dangerous not to be.
A few years earlier, a client in North Vancouver had been charged with the second degree murder
of 40-year-old sex worker Tracy Tom. The client claimed to have no knowledge that Tracy was
transgender until they got to a motel room. Long-time listeners might remember that we
covered this case in Episode 50. The defence successfully relied on what's widely referred
to as the gay panic defence, which states that if the person accused of murder can
demonstrate that they were provoked, the murder charge can be reduced to manslaughter.
In Tracy Tom's case, the accused claimed to have seen some scarring around her genital area
after they got to the motel room, which provoked the violent reaction of strangling her to death
and dumping her body in an abandoned shopping cart. A guilty plea of manslaughter was allowed,
along with a reduced sentence. The gay or trans panic defence justified and excused
violence and murder as a reaction to the victim's sexual orientation or gender identity.
Fortunately, it would be removed from the Canadian Criminal Code in 2015,
but that was three years after the story we're telling today.
On Sunday, September 30th, 2012, January LaPouze's best friend Ash got word that something terrible
had happened to her. He rushed over to her home with some other friends to a confronting mess
of police tape and cars, blocking what was now a crime scene. It was January's neighbours who
heard a struggle coming from her home, and when they ran over to her front door,
they saw her lying on the floor, surrounded by blood, with a man holding a red-stained knife
over her. When he spotted the neighbours, he fled, threatening them with his knife as he ran past.
January was still alive, but only just. She was rushed to hospital.
Ash would say that there was a lot of dried blood on the pavement, which he found extremely hard
to see. He knew it was likely January's blood. The group of friends just stood there, quiet,
in shock, not knowing what to do or what to say, as they watched police and investigators going
back and forth from January's home to their vehicles. It didn't seem real.
January fought for her life in hospital for a few more hours, but her injuries were too severe.
January Marie LaPouze was pronounced dead at 5.44am. She was 26 years old.
Her mother, Betty, was devastated, and the news travelled through the local LGBTQ
plus community like a series of shockwaves. If people didn't know January personally,
they likely knew of her, thanks to her community outreach, her entertaining performances,
and the fact that she organised the Cher Vancouver Float at the Pride Parade.
January Marie LaPouze was a beloved local figure. No one could imagine why anyone would want her
dead. I'm always on the hunt for something new to listen to, an edge of your seats,
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audible my go-to place for premium audio storytelling, and with a growing library
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Run Towards the Danger, the award-winning memoir by Canadian filmmaker Sarah Polly.
It's a frankly astonishing collection of essays about the most dangerous times of her life.
She writes about her history with former CBC personality Gian Gomeschi, including a harrowing
encounter when she was just 16 and he was 28. And she also reflected on her time as a child actor
and the failure of adults to protect her from traumatic situations. It was eye-opening to
say the least. That's Run Towards the Danger by Sarah Polly, and there's even more to imagine with
Audible, from best-selling audiobooks to podcasts to exclusive originals. It is perfect for listening
on the go and I relish the opportunity to turn mindless chores like laundry and making school
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and listen free for 30 days. Visit audible.ca. Initial media reports referred to January's death
as a fatal stabbing, and the RCMP requested the public's assistance to identify the man seen
running from her home with a knife. He was described as a male in his mid-20s, maybe Asian,
approximately 5 foot 5 inches tall with short black hair and a muscular build. He was wearing
a black muscle shirt and grey shorts. Before releasing any information to the media about the
victim of the fatal stabbing, the RCMP's integrated homicide investigation team, also known as IHIT,
confirmed with January's family that she was transgender and had completed the legal paperwork
to change her name to January Marie La Pouse, more than four years earlier. So when the RCMP chose
instead to announce her male birth name or dead name in their media release and refer to her with
male pronouns, her friends and family were understandably upset. January made a point
of treating everyone with respect and dignity, and with minimal effort, it could have been
offered back to her in death, but it wasn't. Reporting for Extra magazine, journalist
Jeremy Hainsworth asked the RCMP for comment on why they made that decision, noting that further
down in the body of their press release, it did state that the victim legally changed her name
in 2008 to January Marie, so it wasn't a case of getting wires crossed and not knowing which
name to print. It was a deliberate choice. Sergeant Jennifer Pound of the RCMP's IHIT team
confirmed that January's family had told them about her legal name change before the press
release was sent out, but she defended their decision. For inexplicable reasons, Pound said
they chose to go by doctors' reports and information they found inside January's home,
instead of her legal name. Another RCMP spokesperson was quoted saying they have the
discretion to write press releases as they see fit. A response to this was provided by David Ebe,
then of the BC Civil Liberties Association and the current Premier of British Columbia.
The implicit understanding in the police release is that the name change wasn't legitimate.
He added that trans people continually face issues with law enforcement when it comes to
identification and called it an issue that wasn't going away. In their press release,
the RCMP had stated that the investigation remained active and ongoing and requested the
public's assistance to find the assailant but couldn't provide any information on the circumstances
or any possible motives. According to Sergeant Jennifer Pound, it would be speculation at that
point to refer to January's murder as a hate crime. She instead chose to note that January was
quote, working in the sex trade to some degree. I believe there were advertisements online,
it's a high risk lifestyle, no doubt about that. Whether intentional or not,
the specific words chosen in this comment minimized the serious circumstances of
January's death, effectively shifting the blame away from the offender.
As the RCMP's eye-hit team continued to investigate,
January's family and close friends organized a private memorial and then a public celebration
of her life. Betty LaPouse would say that she had already lost her own mother and her sister
before she lost January, but nothing prepared her for how difficult losing a child is.
She had no choice but to cremate January because it was the cheapest option to bring her home.
January's loved ones and community celebrated her as a good friend,
a kind and generous person who faced much rejection and ridicule, both as an immigrant,
a transgender woman and someone who once worked and lived on the downtown east side.
But in the face of her own personal hardships, January always prioritized acceptance, open
mindedness and not being judgmental. She saw value in every human.
January's name was included in the official list of deaths for Transgender Day of Remembrance
and likely read out as part of vigils to commemorate the day internationally.
That was November 20th, 2012 and it didn't go unnoticed that almost two months had passed
with no further announcements from investigators. Cher Vancouver was hurting too. Founder Alex Sanger
would later tell the New Westminster Record that the organization lost its spark for a while after
January's death. Everyone considered her the mother of the group, the social glue, and not
having her there left them feeling lost. Quote, we basically shut down after she died. The group
just couldn't function. We just didn't feel like celebrating and having parties. There were doubts
about whether there would ever be justice for January. On December 6th, 2012, just over two
months after January's death, the RCMP iHIT team suddenly announced they had made an arrest.
They named 20-year-old Charles Jameson Mungo-Neal, who went by Jamie, as the person they had charged
with second-degree murder. The announcement gave no information on how the accused was identified
and how they found him. It only mentioned that he had no previous criminal record and that
investigators were continuing to look for a motive in the killing. Jamie Neal was remanded in custody
until his next court appearance in the new year. In the lead up to that bail hearing,
January's loved ones and members of the local LGBTQ plus community decided to stage a rally to call
for justice for January and to voice their concerns about the prospect of Jamie Neal being
released on bail. The rally's organizer, Leader Stray, wanted to stress that this wasn't about
asking people to pass judgment. They encouraged the process of justice and understood that Jamie
Neal had a right to a fair trial. The rally was instead about the prospect of him being released
on bail when he was accused of stabbing a transgender person to death with no provided motive.
On January 5th, 2013, about 80 people marched to the New Westminster Courthouse and stood in
vigil at the front steps. The crowd included New Westminster Councillor Jamie McAvoy,
who said it was important to show support for a group who was among the most disadvantaged in
the Greater Vancouver area. After a greeting and prayer by Kaqqaip First Nation Chief Ronda Larrabee,
candles were lit to honour January. Rally organizer Leader Stray told the crowd they had
been silent in the back corner for far too long. Quote, we've accepted injustice, humiliation,
degradation based solely on the lack of education on our community and our lifestyle.
For me, the death of January Marie Lapouse was the breaking point in my silence.
It's horrific that it took the murder of someone so beautiful, so strong, to break that silence.
Jamie Neal's court appearance was two days after that, and January's loved ones and the community
organisers were surprised and relieved when it was over in about five minutes. Instead of
requesting bail, Neal's lawyer David Tano requested that he continue to be remanded in custody.
It wasn't public knowledge at the time, but as it turned out, Jamie had confessed to the murder
to an undercover officer in his cell. No further details were ever publicly provided about this
confession, but Jamie would be kept in custody right up until his trial.
Jamie Neal is Indigenous and his family are Kwokutol First Nation from Fort Rupert,
located on the northern tip of Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Jamie is one of three children
who ended up being raised by their father as a single parent. Their mother had attended a
residential school, one of the many government funded and church-run schools for Indigenous
children, designed to, quote, kill the Indian in the child. We know that the Canadian government
forcibly removed 150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Métis children from their families to send
them to residential schools. There, they were subjected to neglect, physical and sexual abuse,
experimentation and violence, and thousands died right on their school grounds, buried in unmarked
graves. An overwhelming percentage of those who survived were left with anger, anxiety,
depression, low self-esteem, PTSD, high suicide rates and more. Residential schools took them
away from their families and communities and taught them that parenting was about punishment,
abuse, violence, coercion and control. And this was often inadvertently passed on as
intergenerational trauma when they became parents themselves. Jamie's mother gave birth to his
older brother and then twins, Jamie and his sister, who were born prematurely. His mother wasn't able
to cope with being a parent and left them with their father, David Neal. In a later letter sent
to the court, David would recognise that this abandonment was the single most adverse experience
of his son as a First Nations person. He described it as a significant and early childhood trauma
from which Jamie never fully recovered. According to court documents, Jamie Neal displayed
developmental delays and throughout elementary school he struggled behaviourally, socially
and academically. His father worked with the school in North Vancouver on extensive
interventions to help Jamie, but this problematic behaviour continued. David Neal would describe
his son as a textbook example of what happens to the children of Indigenous people who attended
residential schools. When Jamie was an adolescent, his father moved them to Thailand where he operated
a business. Jamie was enrolled in a private secondary school there but it didn't help with
his behavioural issues. At some point he was expelled after several physical altercations
with other students. The family returned to North Vancouver in 2010 when Jamie was 17 years old
and his father, David, would say he took advantage of all the government and community supports on
offer to help him, but Jamie wasn't interested. The following year, 2011, he did enrol in an
adult basic education program in Vancouver but was removed from the program after another
physical altercation. According to court documents, by the time Jamie was arrested at age 20,
he had no significant employment history but he was supported by his father and siblings who
were described as productive members of the community. Although Jamie reportedly maintained
a close relationship with them, he mostly preferred to spend his time alone and wasn't connected to
the local community. A year after Jamie's trial was ordered, it was announced that he had reached
a plea agreement with the Crown. He would plead guilty but only to manslaughter. He had been
charged with second degree murder which means a murder that was deliberate but occurred without
any planning. In pleading guilty to manslaughter, Jamie accepted responsibility for causing
January's death but denied any intent to kill her. The plea deal hearing was held in June of 2014.
January's loved ones were present, including her mother, Betty Lapuse, seated just two rows
behind Jamie Neal. Betty told the media she was not yet ready to discuss the case or the plea deal.
The Crown presented an agreed statement of facts in which Jamie Neal admitted he was responsible
for the death of January Marie Lapuse and detailed what happened that night.
According to the agreed statement of facts, on September 29th, 2012, 20-year-old Jamie sent a
text message to 26-year-old January to arrange sexual services. He confirmed he didn't know her
but did know she was a transgender sex worker. They agreed on a time and she gave him her address
but they didn't finalise the price for the services. At the time, Jamie was living with his
twin sister and older brother in East Vancouver and he travelled the 15 kilometres or so
to January's new Westminster home, arriving at about 9.45 that evening. He and January had a
conversation about what services he was requesting but they couldn't reach an agreement about the
price, which likely meant that Jamie didn't want to pay the rate that January gave him.
According to the court document, they started arguing and January grabbed some scissors and cut
Jamie's hand. A physical struggle then ensued where Jamie said he grabbed a nearby knife to
defend himself. He proceeded to stab January in the face, neck, arms and torso until her neighbours
showed up to see what the noise was about. Crown prosecutor Rusty Antonuk provided some
additional context, telling the judge that January lapouse was 5 foot 11 inches tall and weighed
just over 250 pounds, as compared with Jamie Neal who was only 110 pounds and 5 foot 6. Journalist
Jennifer Saltman described the difference for the province, quote, January lapouse was 5 inches
taller than Neal and twice as heavy. But it's also relevant to note that January was stabbed a total
of 18 times. At autopsy she was found to have significant injury and internal damage, specifically
to her vertebral artery and jugular vein, which was determined to have caused her death.
Jamie jumped and ran out of the home, threatening the neighbour's friend with a knife as he ran
past. According to the agreed statement of facts, Jamie Neal said he returned to his home, where
his siblings tried to treat his hand wound. Whether he told them the truth about how he got it is
unclear, but he would likely have been covered in blood after stabbing January in the face.
Covered in blood after stabbing January 18 times. Jamie's hand wound was serious enough to warrant
a trip to the hospital to have it seen to by a doctor and shortly after that he said he took
a bus to Calgary. He then flew back to Thailand where it appears his father David was living.
The neighbours had told police they saw a male in his mid-20s running away with a knife,
describing him as maybe Asian. Approximately five foot five inches tall was short black hair and a
muscular build. Apart from the fact that Jamie was 20 and indigenous, the description was fairly
accurate, but there's some mystery as to how the RCMP got from Point A to Point B, how they learned
the man described was actually Jamie Neal, who lived in a different area 15 kilometres away.
The only thing mentioned in the court document is that investigators later recovered the knife he
had been carrying. The RCMP became aware that Jamie Neal had gone to Thailand and were alerted that
he would be returning to Canada on December 5th 2012, just over two months after January's murder.
He was arrested as soon as he returned.
The crown prosecutor said Jamie Neal, quote, overreacted in an explosive and highly violent
manner. He did not have the required intent for murder, but rather used excessive force to defend
himself. The crown agreed with the defences case that January was not killed because she was transgender.
It resulted from an argument, and that's why the crown didn't seek to have it labeled a hate crime.
Extra magazine noted that while the crown prosecutor and the judge consistently referred
to January as Ms Lapuse, Jamie Neal's defense lawyer David Tano called her Mr Lapuse throughout
the court process. The judge heard that the aggravating factors in the case that may warrant
an increased sentence were that January Marie Lapuse was a sex worker and therefore vulnerable.
There was no mention that the fact that she was also transgender made her especially vulnerable.
Another highly aggravating factor according to the crown was that Jamie Neal showed attempts to
avoid criminal prosecution, first by threatening the neighbour with a knife as he ran from January's
home and then by fleeing to Calgary and then Thailand. Clear attempts to evade arrest and the
consequences of his actions. And of course, the fact that Jamie stabbed January so many times
indicated that he overreacted in an explosive and extremely violent manner.
When it came to mitigating factors, the judge had ordered a glad to report be prepared,
a report that details the unique circumstances and systemic issues that come into play with
indigenous offenders. It's in this glad to report that the details of Jamie's family
history were reported, including the intergenerational trauma resulting from his mother's residential
school experience, the impact of her leaving the family and Jamie's struggles after that.
It wasn't an excuse or a reason for his violence that night, but it was noted as a
mitigating circumstance that may warrant a decreased sentence. The glad to report also
noted that while substance use had been an issue for Jamie in the past, neither he nor others
identified it as being a problem in the months before January was murdered. Other mitigating
circumstances included his youth, the fact that Jamie was only 20 years old at the time of the
offence. He pleaded guilty to manslaughter and had no other criminal record. The glad to report
indicated he had intentions to change and was trying to turn his life around.
It also detailed Jamie's expression of empathy and regret about the offence. He indicated that he
was sorry for it and conveyed condolences to January's family and the community.
The judge stated that Jamie's expressions of remorse were, quote,
not as thorough and convincing as one might wish to see, but conceded they may have been more of
a reflection on Jamie's lack of ability to fully express himself. The judge accepted that Jamie's
comments were sincere and noted they were supported by other information provided in the report.
Judge Fritz Verhoeven confirmed with Jamie that he understood that he had pleaded guilty to
manslaughter and that he understood the consequences of that plea. Jamie, seen in glasses, a white shirt
and grey pants, agreed. The crown and defence presented a joint submission asking for a sentence
of eight years in prison, minus time already served. But the sentencing decision was, of course, up to the judge.
In delivering his sentence, Justice Verhoeven noted that rehabilitation remains a significant factor
in Jamie Neill's case, quote, while his youth has been a troubled one and there have been
frequent indications of difficulties including inappropriate behaviour. This offences out of
character for Mr Neill. It was also noted that Jamie Neill had been cooperating with available
programs while in custody and was supported emotionally by his twin sister, older brother
and father, who said they had identified his needs for social and emotional development
and expressed hope for Jamie to receive and respond to those interventions. The judge summarised the
case. While Jamie Neill, quote, stabbed January lapoos with the intent to defend himself, he used
more force than was reasonable in the circumstances. Therefore, Mr Neill is guilty of the crime of
manslaughter, but he is not guilty of murder. A victim impact statement written by January's
mother, Betty Lapouse, was read out loud, quote, January is a person with no sadness. She made
everybody laugh. She loved helping people regardless of race, colour or age. She is sweet
to everyone. Her smile is like sunlight up in the sky. Betty said that she was heartbroken
by January's absence, quote, she was everything I had.
Reporting for Extra Magazine, Jeremy Hainsworth described Jamie Neill as showing no emotion
as this victim impact statement was read. His father, David Neill, didn't attend the hearing.
According to the court document, he was still in Thailand operating a business,
but he did send a letter to the court saying his family was, quote, shocked by what occurred
and very upset by so much grief they have caused to the other family.
Before passing his sentence, the judge asked Jamie if he had anything to say.
Jamie said he expressed his, quote, dearest condolences to the victim's family.
I am sorry for all the trouble and pain I have caused.
Just as Verhoeven found no reason to depart from the Joint Sentencing Submission,
and on October 2nd, 2014, Jamie Neill was sentenced to eight years in prison,
minus time already served. This meant he would serve an additional five years and three months.
Jamie was also ordered to provide a DNA sample and was imposed with a lifetime firearms ban.
When Jamie Neill was let out of court, he looked across the courtroom to his siblings.
His twin sister stood and watched her brother leaving until she could no longer see him.
In a later interview with the Vancouver Sun,
share Vancouver founder Alex Sengar would describe January's murder as a tragedy that
took her away from her community, her friends and her family. And when it came to the defense
insisting it wasn't a hate crime and the crown not treating it like one, Alex didn't believe it.
The clinical counsellor and social worker said that as a transgender person, January was, quote,
marginalised and alienated and isolated and dealing with suffering in her life.
She was involved in survival sex work to pay for her food, her clothing, her phone. She was vulnerable.
Studies show that transgender people are at much higher risk of discrimination and violent
victimisation than their cisgender counterparts, those who identify with their assigned gender
at birth. A much higher proportion of transgender Canadians reported experiencing physical or
sexual assault in their lifetimes, 59% as compared to 37%. And not surprisingly,
in 2021, Statistics Canada reported that the COVID-19 pandemic further exposed and exacerbated
issues related to discrimination in Canada, including hate crime. When it comes to incidents
motivated by a hatred of gender diverse people, the overall number is small relative to some
other hate crime categories like race, religion or ethnicity. But what stands out in the police
reported data is that incidents against trans people are much more violent in nature than other
hate crime categories, with almost 80% of reported incidents involving a violent violation,
almost double the proportion. So when considering this data in the context of the highly violent
way that January La Pouse was stabbed to death that night, there are a few things that really
stand out. The facts of the case are that Jamie Neal knew January was a transgender sex worker.
The evidence shows that when he arrived at her home and learned the price for his requested
services, he didn't want to pay it. He could have just left at that point, but he responded
in a way that obviously caused January to feel unsafe in her own home, prompting her to pick
up a pair of scissors. As an experienced sex worker, she would have had ample experience
with clients who disagreed on price. She would have been experienced in negotiation, and it
stands to reason that it would be extremely unusual for any sex worker to force an agreement
with a potential client by threatening them with a weapon, especially for January who had
no history of violence. It also stands to reason that when she grabbed the scissors,
her preferred outcome would likely have been for Jamie to leave her home immediately.
She may have been taller than him and twice as heavy, but he also had a visible,
muscular build and was likely able to move much faster than she was.
Jamie Neal was the only source for the agreed statement of facts, but even in his version
of events, there was no mention of January making repeated advances with the scissors that may
have required him to fight back in self-defense. Instead of just leaving when his hand was cut,
Jamie chose to grab a weapon of his own from January's home, a knife which he used to stab
her a total of 18 times in an extremely violent manner, an explosive overreaction that only ended
when the neighbours interrupted him. And then there's his obvious attempts to avoid consequences
afterwards, running from January's home, threatening the neighbours with the knife
as he ran past and then ultimately fleeing to Thailand. It's clear to see why January's
community believed hate was more of a factor in her death than self-defense.
Jamie Neal finished his sentence in June of 2019 and was released on parole,
but just five months later in November, his parole was revoked. The only information about this was
reported by Denise Ryan for the Vancouver Sun. Quote, In its decision to revoke Neal's statutory
release, the parole board wrote that he had little regard for the conditions of his release. He had
been intoxicated, engaged in sexual activity without reporting, that a knife had been found in his
room and that he is considered a flight risk. That was more than three years ago and there
hasn't been any public mention of Jamie Neal since. It's not known if he's still in custody.
Shea Vancouver eventually got its spark back. After the shock of January's murder, Alex Senga,
Ash Bra and the rest of the community got back to work, building up their services and community
outreach again. They started peer support groups, crisis counselling and participated with a float
in the Vancouver Pride Parade again. In 2015, the group founded the January Marie LaPoux
Youth Leadership Award, which has been awarded every year since to people between the ages of 16
and 30 who have demonstrated commitment to and leadership in the LGBTQ plus community.
Their next big project was to start working on a short film to celebrate January's life.
Originally, it was supposed to be just a concise five minute memorial to a treasured friend,
but after the directors began the process of interviewing January's friends, family and
community, it ended up being 25 minutes long. The multi-award winning documentary titled My Name
was January was released in 2018, directed by Lenny Sun and Alayna Gress and produced by Alex
Senga and Ash Bra. The film features raw interviews with Betty LaPoux, who speaks about January's
life and her pain as a mother who can't quite come to grips with losing a child. It also explores
January's widespread impact on her friends and loved ones, as well as the local LGBTQ plus community.
The filmmakers didn't want to focus on her death, the man responsible or the court process. Instead,
creating the film to be a legacy, a showcase of January's life and her joyful bubbly personality.
My Name was January went on to win 13 international awards and was selected for 56 different
international film festivals. You can find links to watch it on January's memorial website,
Januaryfilm.com. The film's description ends, quote,
This is the story of January, a friend, a daughter, a person. This film will not only bring justice
to January, but to all the women who have lost their lives. January had a beautiful soul,
and now part of her soul rests in each and every one of us.
Thanks for listening. If you enjoyed this episode, we'd love for you to tell a friend
or leave a review wherever you listen to podcasts. Special thanks to Alex Senga and
Ash Bra from Share Vancouver. You can learn more at shervancouver.com or check out the Share
Vancouver podcast. See the show notes for all the links. Canadian True Crime donates monthly to
organizations helping those facing injustice. And this month, we have donated to the Share
Vancouver LGBTQ Plus Friends Society in memory of January Marie Lapouse. Thanks also to Elliott
Newton for suggesting this case and researching it. Elliott is a non-binary transgender activist
and freelance educator from Ottawa. You can find them at genderbandit.com. For the full list of
resources we relied on to write this episode and anything else you want to know about the podcast,
visit canadiantruecrime.ca. Audio editing and production was by We Talk of Dreams who also
composed the theme songs. Production assistance was by Jesse Hawke with script consulting by
Carol Weinberg. Writing, narration, sound design and additional research was by me
and the disclaimer was voiced by Eric Crosby. I'll be back soon with another Canadian True Crime
episode. See you then.
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