Canadian True Crime - 35 The Murder of Frank and Jocelyn Toope
Episode Date: November 15, 2018Beaconsfield, Quebec. The car of a 75 year old retired Anglican minister and his 70 year old wife was found abandoned in a car park. A twisted tale would unravel... Also includes an update on Paul Ber...nardo's first parole hearing held in October 2018.Podcast recommendations:Don't Talk to Strangers – The Oakland County Child MurdersKINGPINS by ParcastMy interview on CANADALANDSupport my sponsors! Here's where the discount codes are:www.canadiantruecrime.ca/sponsorsJoin my patreon to get early episodes - without any of the ads! - and more: www.patreon.com/canadiantruecrime Credits:Research: Enya BestWriting, additional research, narration, music arrangement: Kristi LeeAudio production: Erik KrosbyDisclaimer voiced by the host of Beyond Bizarre True CrimeAll credits and information sources will be found on the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca.Support the show. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, just a couple of things before I start. I was thrilled to be a guest on a
recent episode of the Canada Land podcast. You will have heard me talk about the show
before. This is the group that is producing the Thunder Bay podcast. Their main show is
about media criticism, news analysis and investigations in Canada, hosted by Jesse Brown. Canadians,
you'll know him as the journalist who broke the Gian Gomeshi story. Anyway, I sat down
with Jesse Brown in Canada Land's Toronto studio to talk about true crime podcasting
in Canada, ethics in the genre plus a couple of other things. I hope you'll check out
Canada Land. There is a link in the show notes.
This podcast contains course language, adult themes and content of a violent and disturbing
nature. Listener discretion is advised. Before I start the story, I wanted to update you
on Paul Bernardo's parole hearing that happened in October in Bath, Ontario. If you're not
Canadian, hopefully you'll remember Paul Bernardo and Carla Hamulca from the first two episodes
of this podcast, the so-called Ken and Barbie Killers. Carla served a reduced prison sentence
under what was called the deal with the devil and was released years ago. But Paul is still
there, a designated dangerous offender convicted of two counts each of first degree murder,
kidnapping, forcible confinement, aggravated sexual assault and one count of committing
and indignity to a human body. He and Carla's victims were teenagers Leslie Mahaffey, Kristen
French and of course Carla's little sister Tammy Hamulca. Not to mention the minimum
of 24 other women that Paul Bernardo admitted to raping before he met Carla. His parole
hearing came just weeks after he was cleared of a minor weapons charge, having a shank
in his cell. The general consensus was that he was framed. He spends his time in solitary
confinement and really has no use for a shank, plus with his parole hearing coming up it
wouldn't have been the best move. For more than two hours at his parole hearing, 54-year-old
Paul Bernardo begged for his freedom, throwing out various reasons to explain what led him
to commit his crimes. He had feelings of inadequacy, a speech impediment as a child and anxiety
over his sexual performance which led to self-esteem and according to him, these caused him to
do what he did. In the parole hearing it came up that in 2014 Paul Bernardo was in a five-week
relationship with a woman who came to visit him in prison several times. There was a suggestion
of conjugal visits but because he has a right to privacy neither the Parole Board of Canada
nor Correctional Services Canada would confirm if he had conjugal visits or not. The media
brought up how unfair it was that Bernardo, a diagnosed psychopath and sexual sadist,
may have been allowed these privileged visits and without the public knowing about it. At
the hearing a psychiatrist spoke about becoming alarmed during that time because Paul began
masturbating incessantly and spoken therapy about sexually assaulting his visitor in the
same way that he assaulted his victims all those years ago. The court heard heart-wrenching
victim impact statements from the mothers of Kristin French and Leslie Mahaffey. Leslie's
mother Debbie said, quote, preparing for this parole hearing has been gut-wrenching for our
family. We have to relive Leslie's pain and horror, our pain and horror, as if it happened
yesterday. It is a nightmare. The pain, despair and anguish is crushing and debilitating. The
healing we have worked so hard to achieve has been ripped apart, just like Leslie was by Bernardo.
The panel only took 30 minutes to decide that Paul Bernardo's parole was denied. But he can apply
again in two years, no doubt sending the families of his victims back onto the roller coaster of
grief and despair. And as for Carla, as far as the public knows, she's still living the life of
suburban stay-at-home mum in Montreal. And now on to today's episode.
Beaconsfield is a suburb on the island of Montreal, Quebec. It's part of the Greater
Montreal region, locally referred to as the West Island, and is known as a prestigious
middle-class residential community. But Beaconsfield has a dark history. Between 1995 and 2006,
multiple homicides and murder suicides took place inside homes that were all within half a kilometer
of each other. Most of them involved middle-aged men killing their wives and children and then
killing themselves. The area would become to known as the Bermuda Triangle of Beaconsfield.
In 1968, a family of four arrived in Montreal. Frank Toup, his wife Jocelyn,
and two kids had travelled from Trinity Bay, Newfoundland. That was Frank's hometown.
Jocelyn was born in Britain. Their kids were Stephen, who was 10 years old, and Allison,
who was six. The family lived like any other family. There were good times and tough times,
and they stuck together. Frank ended up a tenured Anglican priest, rector of St Mary's
Anglican Church in Kirkland, the next suburb over from his Beaconsfield home, until he retired in
1989. By all accounts, he was well known and well loved in the area and even had a street in Kirkland
named after him, a rare thing to do when a person is still alive. By speaking to those close to the
family, it's easy to see why. Frank Toup was said to have given local community groups the use of
his church before they were big enough to have their own facilities. He was described as a decent
man. He and Jocelyn, a great couple. A long time parishioner said Frank would go out of his way to
make people feel at home, and Jocelyn was just as kind. In 1995, Frank had been retired for about
six years and was enjoying his time with Jocelyn. Their kids Stephen and Allison had long since
flown the coop. Stephen was 37 and was enjoying a distinguished academic career that led him to
becoming Dean of McGill University's Law School. Allison was 33 and married, but was a private person.
Just after midnight on Sunday, April the 2nd, 1995, Frank and Jocelyn Toup
were sound asleep in their home in Beaconsfield, Quebec.
Welcome to Canadian True Crime, Episode 35.
The next day, Montreal police received a complaint about an abandoned car in a restaurant parking
lot. When they traced the license plate, they discovered it belonged to Frank
and Jocelyn Toup. They went to the elderly couple's house to conduct a welfare check.
Their home was located on a busy street, and the back door of their bungalow or one-story house
had been broken in two. The police quickly noticed that the house had been ransacked. Something was not
right here. The bodies of Frank and Jocelyn Toup were found in their bedroom. Homicide
detective Lieutenant Jean Francois Martin described the scene as one of the most gruesome he'd ever
witnessed. Quote, it was grim. There was a lot of blood in there, signs of a lot of violence.
At first, police believed the motive was burglary. During the ransacking of the house,
items taken included a radio, jewellery, and about $100 in cash. And of course,
the Toup's car that was found abandoned in the car park. But it wasn't just about burglary,
and it didn't take long for a shocking story to emerge.
The next day at a nearby high school, teenagers started reporting to friends and family that
fellow students had been bragging about some disturbing things. One, just 13 years old,
had boasted to members of his hockey team, including some adult coaching staff,
about the brutal murder of an elderly couple in his involvement. Another kid, 14 years old,
showed off a bloody baseball bat. He commented he just wanted to see what it felt like to kill
somebody. It was a thrill kill, and robbery was an afterthought. Before long, school kids were
showing up to the police station to report what they'd heard. All tips were pointing towards
three boys aged 13, 14, and 15, being responsible for the brutal deaths of Frank and Jocelyn Toup.
The boys were picked up and brought to the station. They were said to have been defiant
about the whole thing. One arresting officer said that the two of them were making jokes
in the back of the police car on the way to the station.
Canada has a long history of disagreements on how the criminal justice system treats
young offenders, with controversy centering on what the best approach is and also the severity
of punishment. As we know, under the Young Offenders Act that was in effect at the time,
the publication of the identities of youths who committed criminal acts was banned,
with the reason that youth are entitled to special consideration and should not be labeled
or made to bear a stigma for acts they carried out at an immature age.
So the identities of the boys were not released. But it came out that they all had a history of
recurring difficulties at home and at school. Initially, only the two oldest boys were put
under arrest, accused of bludgeoning the troops. They were both known to police and had experience
being in trouble with the law. At the police station, the two older boys told their stories
separately, and although there were some contradictions, they agreed on many important points.
Before they broke into the troops' house, they had consumed alcohol and drugs.
One said marijuana, and the other said LSD. The 15-year-old, the oldest of the three,
was wielding a baseball bat. They said they'd spoken about it the night before,
after one of them said he wanted to kill someone. Another said he knew an elderly couple who lived
alone. The boys entered the house with the bat and beer bottles to use as weapons.
First, they said they stole gloves from the garage. The 14-year-old said that as they put on
the gloves, he had commented that the police don't take fingerprints for break and enters,
but they do for murders. A forewarning of their intention. He added, though, that he meant it
as a joke. The three made their way upstairs. It was the early hours of the morning.
The 15-year-old and the 13-year-old entered the bedroom of 75-year-old Frank and his wife,
70-year-old Jocelyn, where they found the couple asleep.
According to the 15-year-old, Jocelyn woke up first and saw a stranger next to the bed,
the 13-year-old. Who are you? she said. He raised his arms and brought a beer bottle crashing down
onto her head. He did it again and again, joined by the 15-year-old and his baseball bat.
Jocelyn was struck eight times in total, five of these being the blows to her head that killed her.
It happened in a split second and Frank began to stir. The 15-year-old said he hit Frank three
times in the back of his neck with the baseball bat. Other blows hit Frank's face, arm, hands, and
chest. By the third swing, Frank slumped on the bed. They were both battered beyond recognition.
The three boys fled the house without a second thought of whether they should call for help for
the troops. As they ran, the reality of what they'd done sank in. The 14-year-old would say,
the only thing said was to keep quiet and not talk about it.
On April 5, 1995, three days after the murder of the troops, all three boys were charged with
first-degree murder. The crown prosecutor said, quote, three young men decided to kill people.
The 13-year-old had only just turned 13 and seemed shell-shocked, quote. To him, it was
like being in a movie as though everything wasn't quite real. But the prosecutor went on to describe
how the other two boys seemed to be enjoying themselves. They raised middle fingers for the
television cameras and, according to court officials, played cards as they waited to
be formally charged, quote. I have never seen a case where an adolescent killed just for the sake
of killing. The media also spoke to school friends of the boys who reported they'd said they were
planning to commit another murder only shortly before they were arrested, quote. It was a bit
like they'd lost all fear. They had gone completely nuts.
The public were outraged about the case and, of course, the publication ban that was in effect.
They wanted to know who these three kids were. Helpless to do much else, the local community
organized fundraisers that raised money to go to charities that Frank and Jocelyn supported.
Students wrote, Frank and Jocelyn Toope were known by many and loved by all. Mr. Toope was
known to a number of the students not only as their minister, but also as their friend,
having personally baptized and confirmed many of them. The fact that the Toopes live so near to
the school touches the entire student body and brings the chilling reality of such brutal crimes
closer to home. Police investigators themselves were shocked. One spoke to the media,
declaring it a big joke to the offenders, quote. They said they did it for kicks.
Residents of Beaconsfield couldn't understand how something like this could happen. Grant Thomas,
the vice principal of Beaconsfield High School at the time, was also a close personal friend of
the Toopes. He couldn't quite believe that it had happened, but said, quote. Interestingly enough,
the three individuals involved were my first choices.
On April the 8th, 1995, six days after the murders, more than 1,300 mourners attended
the funeral of Frank and Jocelyn Toope, filling the Christ Church Cathedral and overflowing out
into the grounds. The Quebec legislature even paused to honor the Toopes.
The couple were described as kind and loving. Cannon Barry Clark told the crowd,
we are here because we want to honor and respect Frank and Jocelyn because in their death they
were neither honored nor respected. He went on to say that a large crowd had gathered to mourn
our shattered illusion that our suburbs are immune to violence and evil. We are here to grieve
our loss of innocence. A nearby resident who was an associate of Frank's said that like everyone,
he was struggling to find a reason for the murder and it was hard to find.
That said, he added that he did not feel the need for revenge and that Frank Toope wouldn't have
either. Quote, if this had happened to someone else, Frank would not have been vindictive.
He would have been as confused as we all are, but he would certainly have wanted to come and
do what we're all doing here today. And that's a tribute to the man he was and the memory he leaves
behind. The autopsy results suggested that the Toope's cause of death was repeated blows to the
head with a baseball bat. They both died from their head wounds. Frank Toope was also repeatedly hit
on the face, chest, arms and hands, suggesting that he may have been trying to fend off his
attacker. The elderly couple had tried desperately to defend themselves.
In early 1996, the 13-year-old and youngest of the three went to trial first, pleading not guilty.
The trial went for a month and painted a shocking picture of young teens addicted to drugs and alcohol,
bludgeoning two elderly people and upstanding citizens and leaving them to bleed to death.
The 13-year-old testified in his own defense, saying that he and one of the other boys,
the 15-year-old, had targeted the Toope's house for a burglary because they wanted
any cash and items they could sell on the street. The 14-year-old also testified,
but gave police another reason why the couple had been targeted. He said he'd been their paper boy
and that they had been stingy with tipping him. He told the police that the Toope's were cheap people.
The 15-year-old also testified, saying that he and the other two didn't intend on murdering the
couple when they broke in. He said they believed the house would be empty and planned to commit a
burglary. He said the only reason why he brought a bat with him was to open a window. He added that
even if they were at home, the tubes were elderly and that they would find it difficult to defend
themselves or to call the police, inferring that the burglary would have gone ahead regardless.
The 15-year-old went on to say he wasn't aware of who they were. He admitted that he hit Frank
once with the baseball bat and saw him fall on his bed. Quote, it wasn't a full swing.
He claimed he didn't know until later that they had died. Quote, it was quite a shock.
I had a grandmother that age. I couldn't do something like that to someone her age.
He testified that he bolted from the house while the 13-year-old continued to beat the tubes to death.
Under the Young Offenders Act, suspects enjoy more legal protection than adults do. For this
reason, the judge ruled several pieces of evidence presented by the Crown as inadmissible, including
conversations that the 13-year-old had with adults at the school, like the conversations with his
hockey team coaches, as well as the voluntary statements that he gave to police. These rulings
meant that the Crown had to rely largely on forensic evidence like the bloody baseball bat
and the testimony of the two other teens. The defence asserted that the Crown had failed to
prove that the boys intended to commit murder that night. At most, the defence said that the
13-year-old could be found guilty of manslaughter and then only if the judge decides that the boy
could have foreseen that the robbery would lead to the killings. This isn't what happened.
The 13-year-old was found guilty of second-degree murder, meaning that the act was not considered
to be premeditated. He received the maximum under the Young Offenders Act, three years
enclosed custody, followed by two years of supervision. After sentencing, the Crown prosecutor
said, quote, he was a time bomb that finally went off. Six months later, in May of 1996,
the older two boys pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and were also sentenced to the maximum
of three years enclosed custody. They would live at a detention centre that housed more than 20
of Montreal's most violent English-speaking young offenders. There, they would participate in a
pioneering rehabilitation project that was described as trying to provide different choices so that
they don't always respond with violence. A month after sentencing, the Mayor of Beaconsfield,
Roy Kemp, said residents were worried about the day when the trio would be released, quote,
you can't rehabilitate someone who's done this in three years.
The three boys each served their sentences and were released from the system when they were 16,
17 and 18. Part of the conditions of their release was that they had to remain in the
province of Quebec for two years. In 2009, author and local Beaconsfield resident, Marsha Wallace,
for the digital journal called Remembering the Tubes 14 Years Later. She spoke about how difficult
it was to locate information on the murders, saying the names of the three boys appeared
nowhere and the nature of their crimes was hidden, quote, our beautiful piece of absurd
legislation, the Young Offenders Act, every day protects the names of these three provably
unrepentant killers from reaching the ears of concerned Canadian citizens. Nearly everyone
I know still talks about the Tubes and how easily their teenage killers got off.
Were they rehabilitated after three years? Normally, we would never know what became
of them because of the publication ban, but in this particular case, the story of the three boys
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Five years after the murder of the troops, less than two years after the three boys were released,
the oldest of the boys, the 15 year old, had another run in with the police. The man was
apprehended while he was driving around in Toronto in the year 2000. The cops saw the truck he was
in was stolen and was in fact being looked for in connection with an armed robbery of a bar in
Montreal. They pulled the truck over and in it they found machetes, bandanas and balaclavas.
The 15 year old, now 20, was charged with having a concealed weapon in the car. It's not publicly
known what happened with the armed robbery but this wasn't the end of it. There were two others
in the car with him and one of them was the 14 year old who participated in the murder of
Frank and Jocelyn Toope, the second oldest of the three and at the time the public had no idea
that any of this was happening after their release. Nor did they know that just six months later,
the same man and three friends, again including the 14 year old, mugged a man in downtown Montreal
who was walking to his car after having drinks with a friend. In 2002, the 15 year old, now aged
22, was charged with being in possession of property obtained through crime. He was able to
enter a guilty plea for both the mugging and this new crime which saw him find $1,250 and sentenced
to two years in jail. Five years later, in 2007, he was back at it again pleading guilty to new
assault and drug possession charges as well as uttering threats. He received a suspended sentence
of two years probation. The next year, he pleaded guilty to an assault charge from 2005 and received
a six month prison term and the 15 year old, now 30 years old, wasn't done yet.
On December the first, 2010, he was driving during a severe thunderstorm and crashed into
a parked tractor trailer in Montreal. The passenger in his car, 38 year old, Derek Pion, was killed
instantly. Paramedics and police who were first on scene reported smelling alcohol
and saw at least one empty beer can in the car. The windshield wipers on the car had clearly
broken and were only crudely attached in a misguided repair job, adding to his incompetence
when driving through the thunderstorm. The driver was charged with impaired driving causing death
and at the scene, he refused to undergo a breathalyzer. Witnesses to the aftermath of the
accident saw him crying uncontrollably as he realized that he had caused the death of his passenger.
The Quebec court judge granted him release on bail on the condition that he undergo a six-month
therapy program while residing at a therapy center not far from downtown Montreal. As part of his
conditions of release after that six months, he was supposed to report into police regularly,
but he didn't. In June of 2011, while out on this release, he showed up at his ex-girlfriend's home,
punched her and then strangled her. During the attack, he found a photograph of the woman's
new boyfriend and set it on fire while threatening to burn down her home. The woman managed to break
free and got help. That assault put him back in jail. And then in May of 2012, he had another
bail release hearing and that's when his identity was released to the public and the whole picture
became clear. The 15-year-old, the oldest of the kids involved in the murders of Frank and Jocelyn
Toup, was now a 32-year-old with a lengthy criminal record named Ryan Patrick McPhee.
His crimes were discussed at length during his release hearing and he was asked to explain
his role in the murder of the Toups. His face was described as having turned crimson as he
explained again that he didn't bring the bat to murder someone, he only thought it was going to be
a robbery. He swung the bat and ran off, he said, thinking that the Toups was still alive.
The prosecutor asked him if he regretted what he did.
Quote, Of course, there isn't a day in my life that I haven't thought about it.
When he was asked why he didn't check in with the police as per the conditions of his release,
he said he had anxiety attacks every time he approached the building. Quote,
My heart beats at 100 miles an hour. I get to the police station and I want to open the door,
but I can't. He also added that he's dealing with a serious problem with alcohol.
His defense lawyer said his client suffered from painful flashbacks of his youth. He offered the
details that Ryan's father died when he was a toddler and that he grew up under difficult
conditions. This is all that's publicly known about the situation, though. The judge was lenient
on Ryan yet again, granting him release under the same conditions as last time, six months at the
treatment facility. Quote, I don't think you understand the importance of the chances you've
been given in the past. You will have to follow your conditions to the letter.
He didn't. Staff detected the smell of beer on Ryan twice in one week, when he reported in at
night. And when he caused unspecified problems with the staff, he was expelled from the treatment
center. As part of his conditions of release, he was supposed to report his expulsion to police
and report into them regularly. But again, he didn't. He, in fact, completely disappeared,
severely breaching the conditions of his release. In October of 2012, an arrest warrant was issued
for him with the media releasing alerts to the public. They reported that he was about 190 pounds
and six feet in height, with brown hair that was partially bald and blue eyes. The photo that
they released of him showed him with a goatee. The next month, he failed to make a court date.
In April of 2012, four months later, Montreal police were called to investigate an armed assault.
Ryan McPhee was involved. The police quickly realized he was the one they were looking for
and arrested him. A year later, in April of 2014, Ryan McPhee appeared in a Montreal court
with the judge ordering that he be detained. Later that year, he had his trial for the car
crash that killed his passenger. He was charged with impaired driving, causing death. Ryan broke
into tears as he turned to face the parents of Derek Payon, the passenger who had been killed
in his car. 38-year-old Derek had left behind a teenage son. Ryan said to his parents, quote,
I'm really sorry for what happened. I've been wanting to talk to you since this happened,
but people told me not to, that it would make it worse. I wish I had trusted my instincts.
He told Derek's parents that he'd pulled their son out of the wreckage and tried to bring him back,
but wasn't able to. Derek's mother, Teresa, replied, You ruined our lives. What were our son's last
words? Did he say something or die right away? She then told Ryan, despite this, she hoped he
would do well when he got out of jail, and she hoped he would be able to take care of the daughter
that he had. Quote, We have a grandson who is 13 and won't see his father again.
Ryan McPhee's sentence was agreed to by both the defense and prosecution. He received four years
prison time, minus time already served, and a three-year driving ban. That was 2014. In February
of 2017, he reached his statutory release date, and the parole board ruled that he could be released
to a halfway house. But just three months later, he was gone again, before being arrested another
three months later by police in the town of St. Catherine's, Ontario. Ryan went back to court
in December of 2017, where his parole was revoked. According to the parole board's written summary,
Ryan had continued to act with violence while behind bars. He was described as having been
involved in altercations with other inmates, intimidating correctional service Canada personnel,
and had to be transferred to a maximum security penitentiary in May 2015. Quote, Your behaviour
while under supervision in the community has been dismal. You have made no progress to address
your risk factors, although you had the opportunity to do so through counselling and programming.
Instead, you decided to abscond for a period of three months until you were arrest.
The parole board went on to say that Ryan offered poor credibility to respect parole conditions.
Quote, You have showed violent behaviour on a number of occasions, and have caused the death
of three people throughout your criminal life. Ryan's case management team, the group of people
who helped prepare an inmate for release, stated they noticed a change in his attitude the year
before. He seemed to be open to address issues that contributed to his criminality, and asked to
start seeing a psychologist. But the written report from the parole board said Ryan hadn't
participated in any rehabilitation programs because of his misbehaviour. Quote, Therefore your
risk of recidivism or reoffending and your dangerousness levels have not changed. The
board cannot see observable and measurable changes. As far as is publicly known, Ryan McPhee is still
in jail. So that was what happened to the 15 year old, the oldest boy involved in the murder of
the tubes. But court records show that Ryan McPhee was not the only one of the three youths to later
reoffend as adults. As we know, the 14 year old was involved in several of Ryan's early crimes.
The mugging of the man in Montreal in 1999, and being in the car with Ryan when he was found
with a machete, possibly connected to the armed robbery. In 2001, at age 20, he was sentenced
to a 30 month prison term for his involvement in the mugging. But there has been no further
information about him, and his identity was never released. And lastly, the 13 year old,
the youngest. The one who, according to the two older boys, actually murdered Frank and Jocelyn
Toup. During his youth court hearing in 1999 to set conditions for his release, he made a statement.
Then age 16, he thanked the prosecutor in the case for the sentence he received. Quote,
Because of what you did, it changed my life from what I was before and what I am now.
He claimed that the sentence had made him a better person. Unfortunately, a year later,
age 17, he was charged with violating his probation. And then, in November of 2000,
at age 18, he was caught by the Montreal police while in possession of cocaine.
In 2003, the Young Offenders Act was replaced by the Youth Criminal Justice Act. One of the
catalysts for this change was the case of 15 year old Jonathan Womback in Newmarket, Ontario,
a town north of Toronto. In June of 1999, he was sentenced to a 30 month prison term for his
death. Luckily, he didn't, but he needed emergency surgery and spent six months recovering in a
hospital, three of which were in a coma. In June of 1999, Jonathan was taken by a gang of teenage
boys. They kicked him so hard that they shattered his skull and broke his jaw. They then left him
to die. Luckily, he didn't, but he needed emergency surgery and spent six months recovering in a
hospital, three of which were in a coma. When he woke, his intellect and memory were intact,
but he needed to learn how to walk and talk again. Years of physio followed.
Three boys, two 17 year olds and a 16 year old, were charged in the attack,
but the charges were downgraded from attempted murder to aggravated assault.
Jonathan's father, Joe, was shocked by how the Young Offenders Act minimized the consequences
of the brutal crime committed against his son by the gang of teenagers. Quote,
a 19 year old who steals $500 out of your house will spend more time in jail than a 17 year old
who murders your son. Is there something wrong with what we are telling people today?
The new Youth Criminal Justice Act came into force in 2003 and introduced reforms to address various
concerns with the previous legislation. The overarching goal of the act was to ensure that
youth offender treatment was proportionate, community based and used the least restrictive
option. Among the changes were an increase in the number of measures to deal with crimes
other than incarceration, like police warnings and a referral to restorative justice agencies
that see the young offender facing their victim and the victim's family. Also deferred custody
orders whereby a young person can avoid jail time with good behavior. The act also established
that the court process was reserved for more serious offences and just as importantly,
it also recognized the need to take a better look into the interests of the victims,
which the Young Offenders Act failed to do. But the new act still has a lot of critics
who say it's too lenient on young offenders. And the publication bans remain, meaning the
cases are still shrouded in mystery. The public generally doesn't know what happens to these
young offenders when they're released unless they commit other serious crimes, as in the story of
Frank and Jocelyn Toop. Alison Toop, the younger daughter of the couple, is now 56 and still a
private person. Stephen Toop, the older son, does not have the same story. He is now 60 years old
and married with three adult children. He's had a very distinguished career as an academic
and is currently the Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom.
In fact, he was the first non-British person to be placed in the position.
Stephen himself studied in Cambridge back when he was at university and recalled how his parents
came to visit him on campus their first and only overseas trip. He remembered their sense of awe
and wonder when they visited him and says it was a bittersweet memory that he'll cherish forever.
He was asked about the murder of his parents and how he coped. He said that at the time
his faith was what enabled him to continue, and he decided not to let the killers make a victim
of him too. Quote, evil exists and we can't always prevent it, but I never wanted to be a victim.
I chose to just get on with my life. Thanks for listening and special thanks to Anya Best
for researching this case for me. Thank you to everyone who has sent me messages of support
and left reviews and ratings for my show. I really appreciate it. I'm on Facebook,
Twitter and Instagram. Just search for Canadian True Crime. And if you are interested in
ad-free episodes that are released early, you can sign up to my Patreon for just $2 a month
to access my exclusive feed. Just go to PATREON.com slash Canadian True Crime.
Today's podcast recommendation is a brand new one from my friend Nina Instead from Already Gone.
She is doing a deep dive into the Oakland County child murders and her show is already gathering
up quite the buzz. From January 1st, 1976 through the end of March, 1977, the Metro Detroit area was
the site of nine child murders. Three of those cases are resolved, but the other six cases
remain open, with most of these deaths attributed to the as yet unidentified Oakland County child
killer. Don't Talk to Strangers is a long form podcast focused on this series of unresolved
child murders. Join us as we explore the stories of these young victims, the impact on their
families and the community, and what happened to the investigation into these crimes.
Subscribe to Don't Talk to Strangers on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or your favorite podcatcher.
This episode of Canadian True Crime was researched by Anya Best, written by me,
and audio production was by Eric Crosby. The host of the Beyond Bazaar True Crime podcast,
Voice the Disclaimer, and the Canadian True Crime theme song was written by We Talk of Dreams.
I'll be back soon with another Canadian True Crime story. See you then.