Canadian True Crime - 74 Renfrew County Murders
Episode Date: October 15, 2020ONTARIOIn 2015, Renfrew County in the Ottawa Valley would be the backdrop for the worst-ever case of intimate-partner violence in Ontario, and one of the worst in Canadian history.Resources for Domest...ic violenceCanada: https://endingviolencecanada.org/getting-help-2/US: https://www.thehotline.org/Signs you’re in an abusive relationship - and how to get help Canadian True Crime monthly donation has gone to:Women’s Women's Sexual Assault Centre of Renfrew County Thanks for supporting my sponsors!See the special offer codes here AD FREE Exclusive feed - Canadian True Crime supportersAccess ad-free episodes, bonus episodes, and more on Patreon and Supercast Learn more Podcast recommendationCanadaland - a new story from Canada every Monday that you won't hear anywhere else Credits:Research and writing: Dierdre BradleyWriting and editing: Kristi LeeAudio editing and production: We Talk of Dreams Disclaimer voiced by the host of TrueTheme Song: We Talk of DreamsAll credits and sources can be found on the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This podcast contains course language, adult themes, and content of a violent and disturbing nature.
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In the province of Ontario is Renfrew County, stretching west from Ottawa to the northern tip of historic Algonquin Park.
Renfrew County is known for rolling countryside, gorgeous forests, glistening lakes, and vibrant fall colours.
With a population of 107,000 people spread out over 7,000 square miles,
it's a rural area known for traditional, conservative values.
In 2015, Renfrew County would become known for something else.
It would be the location of the worst-ever case of intimate partner violence in Ontario,
and one of the worst in Canadian history.
Natalie Warmadam had lived in Toronto with her husband and two children,
but in 2005 they moved back to the Ottawa Valley.
Both Natalie and her husband Frank had been raised in the area
and wanted that experience for their family while their kids were still young enough to benefit.
And Natalie had recently changed careers.
She was originally a technical writer, but she had a yearning to care for people,
so she decided to go back to school.
She worked hard, got her qualification, and secured a job as a palliative care nurse,
providing care and comfort to people with terminal or degenerative illnesses.
After their move to the Ottawa Valley, Natalie and Frank's marriage would only survive a few more years.
At the time of their separation, 43-year-old Natalie was working at a community care access centre,
travelling around the county, taking care of patients.
She was known to be vivacious and fun to be around.
One of the patients she cared for in hospice had a son called Basil,
a 52-year-old unemployed millwright or person who works with factory machinery.
While Renfrew County is a rural community, it's also tight-knit and rumours spread like wildfire.
And Basil Barutski was known to have a troublesome past.
But from Natalie's experience, when he came to visit his father in hospice, they got on well.
He seemed like a nice guy.
Basil would later insist that it was Natalie who put the moves on him,
but a friend of hers would tell Chattelaine that she remembered it differently.
Quote,
Anything you need to know about Basil can be summed up by the fact that his father was dying in hospice
and he was hitting on his father's nurse.
Natalie entertained the idea, but her mother urged her not to get involved.
She'd heard that Basil's marriage had ended with a terrible, violent break-up
and his ex-wife had been physically assaulted.
And according to the word on the street, there were others.
Natalie spoke with Basil about the situation and he told her that even though he'd been charged with assault,
all those charges were dropped.
So he'd never actually been convicted of anything.
He assured her that his ex-wife was just a crazy woman
and any other women that said anything bad against him just had a vendetta.
Regardless, he insisted that whatever happened was all in the past.
Natalie's ex-husband, Frank, would tell the National Post that she was in a fragile and emotional state
after their marriage breakdown.
She was vulnerable.
I'm Christy, an Australian who's called Canada home for more than a decade
and this is my passion project.
Join me to hear about some of the most thought-provoking
and often heartbreaking true crime cases in Canada.
Using court documents and news archives, I take you through each story from beginning to end
with a look at the way the media covered the crime and the impact it had on the community.
This is Canadian true crime.
BASIL BRUTSKI
BASIL BRUTSKI was born in 1957 to second-generation Polish immigrants.
His father, Walter, was a trapper, while his mother, Beatrice,
stayed home with the children in Renfrew County.
BASIL's reputation can be traced back to his school days.
Some saw him as someone who just did not fit in and others saw him as a bully.
In 1977, 20-year-old BASIL was charged with his first violent offence.
He had assaulted his girlfriend.
He was convicted of causing bodily harm and uttering threats.
He then began a relationship with a woman called Mary Ann,
known as a kind and giving person who had a daughter from a previous relationship.
BASIL's violent tendencies were always lurking under the surface.
Mary Ann would later describe what she was subjected to as
a steady regimen of domestic violence.
Relationships marred by domestic violence typically flow through a sequence,
commonly called the cycle of abuse.
Stage one is where tensions build and the survivor is on edge.
Stage two is the incident, whether it be verbal, emotional or physical abuse.
Stage three is reconciliation, where the abuser woos the survivor back into their good graces.
There's apologies, there's excuses, there's promises not to do it again.
But there's also gaslighting. It wasn't that bad.
No one will believe you. And victim blaming.
You made me do it.
After the abuser has succeeded in getting the survivor back on side, come stage four, calm.
Everyone has settled down and moved on from the incident.
But because it's a cycle, it doesn't take long before the relationship is back to stage one,
with tensions building again, leading up to another abusive incident.
This cycle can be seen over and over in Marianne and Basel's relationship,
which spanned some 26 years, starting from 1980.
He ended up in court on three separate occasions on charges of physically assaulting Marianne,
who was then considered his common law wife.
According to the Ottawa citizen, the first assault was in 1985.
Basel spent $20,000 in legal fees to defend himself against the charges, and was successful.
The cycle of abuse continued.
The next year, Marianne gave birth to their first daughter together.
The second assault on Marianne was at the end of 1993.
According to court documents, Basel pulled her hair, slapped her, and tried to push her out of a moving vehicle.
Again, he was charged with assault.
But this time, instead of spending the money on an expensive legal defense,
he stalked Marianne and pestered her to recant her statement,
telling her that no one would believe her anyway because of his previous acquittal.
He also threatened that she would never see her children again.
But Marianne remained steadfast.
Now, Basel was trained and worked as a millwright,
a high-precision, skilled tradesman who works with factory machinery, plants, and construction sites.
But in the time after the latest assault charges,
he injured his back in a car crash and could no longer work, so he went on disability.
Now Basel used every tool he had to his advantage.
He'd changed, it wouldn't happen again.
He announced to Marianne that he wanted to get married and start afresh.
She agreed to reconcile.
In the months leading up to his court appearance for assaulting her,
the couple were married and not long after that,
Marianne found out she was pregnant with their second daughter.
She would later come to believe that his sudden interest in marriage and babies
was part of a strategy to beat the charges.
Surely, no judge would send a married father with a child on the way to prison.
In court, Basel himself insisted that he was innocent and Marianne was just being vindictive.
The plan worked. Basel was acquitted a second time.
But by the time the baby was born, the couple had separated again.
Four years later, Basel was able to sweet-talk Marianne into reconciling again.
It was now 1998.
Over the next ten years, Marianne battled breast cancer and survived.
But then something happened that court documents would only describe as a violent incident.
One of their daughters would say that her mother came home bloodied and dirty after the incident.
Whatever happened, Marianne decided that was enough.
She laid domestic assault charges and the couple separated for the final time after this incident.
In court, Basel had the audacity to insist that Marianne's injuries were self-inflicted.
He was charged with uttering threats and assaulting his wife.
But he agreed to sign a peace bond and the assault charges were dropped.
He walked away a free man, but the court ordered that Basel had to stay away from Marianne for a year.
He ignored it. Instead, he stalked her.
Basel was highly disgruntled in his life.
He erected multiple signs at the entrance to his property with a long handwritten list of people he declared were his enemies.
Marianne was featured along with some police officers and other people.
A neighbour would say that at least one of the signs threatened to shoot any intruders.
Two years later on New Year's Eve of 2010, Basel was charged after a roadside breath test where he was found to be over the limit.
He accused the police of rigging the breathalyzer. His licence was suspended.
The next year, 49-year-old Marianne and 54-year-old Basel attended court to finalise their divorce.
Marianne testified about the abuse she had suffered at Basel's hands and how he, quote, destroyed her spirit with his relentless threats and abuse.
She said even after they separated, he continued to stalk her.
He denied it all, of course, and flipped it as he always did.
It was he who lived in constant fear of being falsely accused by Marianne.
Of course, he again brought up the fact that he was never convicted of anything during their relationship.
At this hearing, both of their daughters testified about the abuse they had witnessed their mother encounter.
They described how their father was violent, easily agitated and tyrannical toward his family members.
The court heard that he had repeatedly threatened to burn down the house they'd lived in,
and how after it had been vacated, the house did end up burning to the ground in what the media called mysterious circumstances.
There was never any concrete proof about what happened.
In his own defence, Basel produced a so-called marriage contract
and pointed out where he said Marianne agreed to give him full custody of the children and control of her finances
and where she declared she had made false statements about him.
Marianne testified that Basel had coerced her into signing the contract when she was battling breast cancer.
The contract was discarded by the judge who described their marriage as being wretched.
It was this divorce that formed the basis for the most recent rumours about Basel,
but the only thing on the public record that indicated just how dangerous he was
was the conviction from 1977 when he assaulted his girlfriend, a one-off from decades ago,
and this fact would be something he would continue to reference.
So Basel was now trying to get with Natalie Warmedam as she cared for his dying father.
She'd heard the rumours about him, but friends and family described her as always seeing the good in people.
Natalie rationalised it to herself.
Whatever might have happened, surely if Basel was actually guilty of doing something wrong,
he would have been convicted of something, and he seemed so nice.
Her daughter Valerie would say that he told Natalie she was the most beautiful, amazing woman in the world.
He gave her comfort at a time when she was going through a separation and was feeling vulnerable.
She decided to give Basel the benefit of the doubt.
Soon after the two started dating, Basel talked his way in to moving into her house.
Natalie's friends were concerned about him from early on, not only because of his reputation,
but because it was clear that he had a serious drinking problem.
Natalie's ex-husband Frank was concerned as well.
He had moved to California for work, and this man was living in the same house as the two kids he shared with Natalie.
Frank hired a private investigator to run a criminal background check on Basel Borutski.
The only conviction on his record was that one from 1977.
All other charges had indeed been dropped, so there wasn't much that Frank could do.
Basel lived there for two years.
Natalie's daughter Valerie, in her mid teens at the time,
would tell the CBC that Basel showered her mother with a constant barrage of abuse,
chipping away at her self-esteem and making them all fearful of him.
By 2012, the relationship had completely fallen apart.
Basel's drinking was a major problem, and the house was a volatile environment with increasing arguments and yelling.
By now, Natalie and both of her kids were utterly terrified.
She wanted him out of her house, but he wouldn't leave,
so in desperation, she moved into the guest bedroom of her own house.
Her daughter Valerie, in her mid teens at the time,
would tell the Fifth Estate that she and her brother heard Basel keeping their mother up at night, yelling at her,
telling her that because they were common law, he deserved half of her possessions.
Valerie also heard him say, quote,
If Mary Ann ever puts me in jail, don't wait for me because if I get out, I'm going to kill her.
Natalie was by now desperately afraid for her and her children's safety,
and after a particularly violent night, she decided enough was enough and went to the police.
In July of 2012, Basel Borutski was charged with assaulting Natalie Wormadam,
as well as issuing two threats, one to kill her dog and another to physically assault and kill her son.
And this was not the first time.
He was hostile and aggressive as he was arrested.
He assaulted a police officer, and once he was in jail, he urinated on the wall and carpet of the jail cell.
These incidents would be added to his record.
When it came to Natalie's charges, Basel agreed to plead guilty on the lesser charge of uttering threats,
but only if the assault charge was dropped.
While this seems unfair to Natalie, it meant that there would be no trial and she wouldn't have to testify.
At his sentencing, she submitted a victim impact statement,
quote, his alcohol-fuelled rages left me to question myself, my self-worth, and my judgement.
When it came to sentencing, the rules of the Canadian legal system make it so that previous charges brought against Basel that had been dropped
weren't able to be taken into consideration.
So, Basel Borutski was sentenced to five months in jail,
and with the four months he'd already served, he would be released in just 33 days after the sentencing.
He was also given a 10-year ban on possessing or owning weapons and a two-year probation,
which required him to take part in a partner assault program called Living Without Violence.
He never showed up.
Even with his history of intimate partner violence and repeatedly ignoring his probation conditions,
he was not the one monitored.
Basel had been ordered to have no contact with Natalie, but she was the one who had to monitor it.
She was given a panic button with a GPS and told to press it if Basel came within 500 metres.
She bought a shotgun to keep by the bed. She had security cameras mounted inside and outside her house.
She kept a tactical pen in her purse.
She developed the habit of backing into parking spaces wherever she went,
so if he did turn up anywhere near her, she could leave quickly.
Natalie Warmedam was serious about defending herself and her family.
Anastasia Kuzik, known as Anna to friends, and Stacia or Stache to her family,
had worked as a park ranger in Algonquin Park before moving to the community of Wilno in the Ottawa Valley,
to be close to her two sisters and mother.
Anna was known for being shy at first, but someone who was a friend to all.
She loved nature and animals and was known for her passion for horses.
She rode competitively, she had competition ribbons everywhere,
and had won an Ontario Provincial Championship.
Anna had worked as a server at the Wilno Tavern, a prime hangout spot in the area,
and won that Basel Borutski was known to frequent on occasion.
According to Shatterlane magazine, his reputation preceded him even then.
He was known to be aggressive, the kind of guy you didn't want to be around.
When he arrived at the tavern, some locals would move to the other end of the bar.
But he was always friendly to Anna, and it wasn't hard to see why.
She was well liked, easy to get along with, and attentive to customers.
She was also ambitious.
She had worked hard to get her realtors licensed,
so she could become a real estate agent on the side,
and she was making a serious success of it.
Word of mouth was growing.
Basel asked her for help finding a new home after he and Mary Ann separated.
As we know, it didn't take long before he moved in with Natalie Warmadam,
so that problem was solved.
Basel's father had now passed away,
so he also asked Anna for help with selling his father's home.
They became so friendly that at one point,
Anna and her boyfriend went and visited Basel and Natalie
where they lived at Natalie's house.
When Basel went to prison for threatening Natalie,
Anna lost touch with him,
and when he got out five months later,
he needed a place to stay,
so he first called on a favour from a friend
who let him live in a rundown farmhouse.
As soon as he sorted that out, he called Anna.
By this time, Anna's relationship with her boyfriend had soured,
and they had broken up.
Like Natalie, Anna was feeling vulnerable and emotional.
55-year-old Basel talked with 34-year-old Anna about her breakup
and heard that she was now struggling financially,
and the farmhouse she lived in required a lot of renovations.
Basel offered to help her fix it up.
Anna was aware of his history and brought it up with him.
Just like he did with Natalie,
he convinced her that it was because of vengeful, crazy women
and that he was the victim.
There were several other similarities between Natalie and Anna.
They were both fresh from devastating relationship breakups.
They both gave people the benefit of the doubt,
and, before too long,
Basel had moved in to Anna's farmhouse,
just like he had with Natalie.
They were now a couple.
It took just a few months,
before the relationship came apart.
The day before New Year's Eve,
Basel brutally assaulted Anna and tried to choke her.
She would tell the police that she saw his eyes turning black and empty,
and she thought he was going to either kill her or rape her.
Quote,
I was screaming at that point in time.
I was begging him to kill me.
My face was very swollen.
Very battered up,
and he wanted me to stop talking.
He kept holding my mouth,
and he had his hands around my throat,
like pressing.
He said that it wasn't me.
He said that it was the other woman that I had taken the beating for,
the other women that had wrecked his life.
But Anna didn't lay charges at first,
nor did she seek medical attention for her injuries.
She was scared,
of Basel,
and of what people would think.
She urged him to get help for his issues,
and he acknowledged that he needed it.
But a few days later,
he hadn't taken any action,
so she photographed her injuries as a precaution.
When she brought up the attack again,
he effectively gaslit her.
Quote,
he didn't remember half of her injuries,
Quote,
he didn't remember half the things I said that he'd done,
he didn't remember hitting me,
he didn't recall strangling me,
like trying to hold my throat upstairs.
He said that it wasn't me.
But, not even three weeks later,
Basel was at it again.
At midnight on a night in January 2014,
Anna threw him out after they had an argument.
She then locked the door and went to bed.
But in the morning, Basel returned and he was in a rage.
He busted down the door.
He ran around the house,
gathering what he knew were Anna's sentimental,
handmade childhood items,
including an antique rocking horse,
and a wooden tabletop hockey game.
Cruely, he threw them into the fireplace,
and set them alight.
Anna would testify that she tried to wrestle him
and stop him,
but he fought her back so he could watch them burn.
He then stole some of her other items,
including her cell phone,
and then took off in her mother's car without permission.
Anna had been in contact with Natalie Warmadam
about their shared experiences with Basel.
Natalie urged Anna to lay charges.
She had been outraged that her own assault charges
were dropped in a plea deal,
and she was determined not to let it happen again.
Basel needed to be convicted of assault this time,
or other women won't know that he's a danger,
and this could happen again.
Anna summoned the courage and laid the charges.
Basel was charged with the assault,
burning Anna's possessions,
stealing her mother's car,
and breaching his probation.
Anna testified about her experiences,
as well as a disturbing dream Basel told her about,
where he said he held Natalie under the water,
and she drowned.
The prosecution noted that he had quite the collection
of violated court orders,
including a driving probation
where he'd been asked to forfeit his driver's license
and a weapons probation.
The court records noted additional concerns
about Basel's propensity to reoffend,
and the fact that the charges against him
seemed to be escalating each time he came back to court.
This time Basel was found guilty
and sentenced to 17 months in prison,
but he was out in five with two years probation.
His 10-year ban on weapons was upgraded to a lifetime ban,
and he was also required to sign a no-contact document
saying he would stay away from Anna.
He refused to sign,
but he was released anyway,
and Anna had no idea that he had even been released,
because no one from the criminal justice system
had bothered to tell her.
Another person who didn't know was Natalie Wormadam.
By now, she was starting to feel a little safer.
As far as she knew, Basel was still behind bars,
and in any event,
she felt that the time that she was most at risk
was likely behind her.
Natalie even started to relax a little.
Part of Basel's probation was a renewed requirement
to attend the Living Without Violence course
from his previous probation.
The course coordinator told the Fifth Estate
that when he was notified of Basel's required attendance,
he looked through his records and was alarmed by what he saw,
especially the sheer ferocity of the attack against Anna Kuzik.
In his experience working with abusers,
this attack was far beyond the norm.
Because of this, the coordinator looked out
for Basel's attendance at the course.
But he didn't show up again.
The coordinator contacted his parole officer
to let them know, but never heard anything back.
While Basel mostly did show up for his scheduled parole meetings,
there was no record of any follow-up
or any kind of consequences for these breaches of probation.
When he was released, he moved to an apartment block
in a town called Palmer Rapids, still in Renfrew County.
He made friends with a neighbour there, Sherle,
who described him to various media outlets as a nice guy
who used to bring her over baked goods
as well as meals that he'd cooked himself.
He even planted a strawberry patch under her picture window
and did mechanical work on her car.
All he asked in return was to borrow that car
several times a week to run errands.
It's not known if Sherle knew
that he had forfeited his driver's licence.
Sherle did say he asked her something else
that disturbed her one time.
He wanted her to ask her boyfriend
if he knew someone who could sell him a gun.
Sherle felt uneasy about it and never did ask.
One day, Basel was at the local tavern
when he ran into a friendly acquaintance
and some time love interest
that he'd lost contact with when he was in prison.
66-year-old widow Carol Colletton
was shoring up plans for her upcoming retirement
after spending more than a decade in the public service.
Her husband had died of cancer a few years beforehand
and she was getting her finances in order.
She had a small cottage nearby on Kamineskeg Lake
that she planned to sell as part of her retirement plan.
When she ran into Basel at the tavern,
they caught up and she mentioned to him in passing
that she had to fix up her cottage before she could sell it.
He was quick to offer to help her,
saying he was bored and she'd save money.
At first, she was okay with him giving it a go.
But boundaries were an issue for Basel.
He would borrow his neighbour Sherle's car
and just show up at Carol's cottage to work on it.
Carol wasn't happy.
She told friends that not only was his work not great,
but he left projects she wanted him to do unfinished
and would instead start other projects she didn't ask for.
She started to feel like the cottage wasn't hers anymore.
As well as showing up at her holiday cottage,
Basel also showed up unannounced at her actual home,
which was two hours away.
Carol had never actually given him her address,
but she would find out that he got it from a Christmas card.
Friends were concerned for Carol.
They told her that it was clear he was pursuing her romantically
and in fact he seemed to be stalking her.
But she gave the impression that she had the situation under control.
In early September of 2015,
Labor Day weekend,
Carol was at the cottage having drinks with Basel
and a friend called Jim.
Carol was a fun person to be around.
Friends described her as someone who had a dry sense of humour
and a twinkle in her eye.
Things were going well that night,
until Carol sat on Jim's knee
and Basel became jealous and angry.
He and Carol fought about it.
To Carol, they weren't in a relationship,
so what right did he have to behave like this?
He retaliated by tearing up her flower garden.
He even stormed around to Jim's house
and demanded to know if he was interested in Carol.
The second week of September,
Carol celebrated her retirement
and started saying goodbye to her work friends.
She had worked hard
and had been through the hardship of losing her husband.
She was ready to start the next phase of her life
and would enjoy doing gardening, playing cards
and just generally enjoying herself.
But Basel Borutski was not making that easy for her.
He had been texting incessantly,
insisting that his act of destroying her flower garden
was what a professional had told him to do
to deal with his anger issues.
He said he'd been told to take them out on inanimate objects.
Carol wasn't into the drama
and didn't want to engage with him,
so she resorted to only answering his texts every so often,
saying things like,
I'm sorry you feel this way, I really am.
He kept talking about putting everything behind them.
Quote, it's totally up to you now.
Are we going down the negative path or the positive path?
Regardless of your choice, I'm okay,
but obviously I prefer positive.
By the third week of September, Carol had had enough.
On Sunday, September the 20th,
she told Basel that she had rekindled a relationship
with an old flame and asked him not to bother her anymore.
He texted back, begging her for an explanation
and trying to reassure her that he was a good person,
not someone who was violent or vengeful.
The next day, he drove over to the cottage
to confront her in person, but she wasn't there.
He told her neighbour that he was very upset
and was there to collect his things.
He then left more than 10 handwritten messages
all over her property.
They were incredibly passive-aggressive.
One said, thanks for leaving, Carol.
I was wondering how I was going to get rid of you
so I could do this.
Happy, positive retirement.
Sorry, I'm such an asshole.
Carol took photos of each message with her digital camera.
Later that day, his attitude changed.
Now, he was downright aggressive.
He sent her angry texts,
calling her a cruel, vindictive, self-centred human being.
He accused her of scamming him for free labour
and told her he will endure her betrayal
and threatened that karma was going to take over.
Carol planned to stay in the Lake Cottage by herself that night
because she was meeting a real estate agent there in the morning
to talk about putting it on the market.
Her new partner and friends were seriously worried
and warned Carol to be careful.
But she insisted she would be fine,
and if anything were to happen,
she would lock the door and call 911.
That same night, Basel was complaining to his neighbours.
Some of them noticed that he seemed depressed.
He told them the story that he had just broken up
with his girlfriend at her cottage
after finding her in bed with another man.
He said he was angry,
and he ranted about women being sluts and whores.
Cheryl, the neighbour who often lent her car to Basel,
heard that he hadn't slept at all the night before.
He said that Carol had rejected him and he was upset.
Quote, karma's going to get her.
Cheryl said she could see the anger in his face.
She would say to the 5th estate,
I could tell that night he was going to snap.
When she woke up the next morning, her car was gone.
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It was early in the morning
of September 22nd,
2015.
Carol Colletton's close friend
Teresa was calling the cottage
to make sure she was okay.
There was no answer.
She called back again.
Same result.
It was still early though. She tried again soon.
Anastasia Kuzek,
the 36-year-old real estate agent,
had her sister Ava
staying at her house in Wilno.
It was about 8.45 in the morning
and Ava was upstairs folding laundry
when all of a sudden
she heard Anna scream.
Ava ran downstairs
to see Anna crouched on the floor
of the kitchen.
She said in a whisper,
it's basal. Ava then saw the man
near the kitchen door.
She seemed surprised to see Ava
and he exited the house.
Ava rushed out to confront him,
yelling at him to
stay away from my sister.
She then ran to the front door
to make sure he'd left,
but instead she saw him coming back
with a big shotgun.
So she ran back into the house
and peered out the window.
He was now on the porch,
walking towards the kitchen door again.
She thought to herself,
and she knew she had to get help.
Then, she heard the gun
go off.
She ran barefoot out of the house
to get help and kept running
because she heard footsteps behind her
and thought he was following her.
It turned out to be Anna's dog.
As Ava approached the highway,
she saw a line marking vehicle
and ran to it.
When 911 was on the line,
a distraught Ava told the dispatcher
she heard screaming
that he hadn't killed her sister.
The dispatcher told her to breathe.
As the first responders rushed
to the house,
Ava called their other sister Laura
and then their mother,
who all lived nearby.
They met the police back at the house
where they were given the devastating news
that their beloved Stacia
was dead.
The 36-year-old had been shot
point blank as she tried to hide
behind her kitchen island.
And Basel was nowhere to be found.
He had fled the scene.
By 9am, reports
of an active shooter were spreading
throughout the community.
Police from three different townships
descended in the community of Willnow
where Anna lived.
An emergency response unit
had been training in a nearby park
and they arrived as well.
The local schools were put on lockdown.
Carol Colletton's friend Teresa
was still waiting for the news
that her friend was OK.
Teresa turned on the TV.
Ontario Provincial Police
were reporting that there was a
shooter on the loose in Willnow
just 20 minutes from Carol's cottage
and one person was dead.
They said the shooter
is believed to be in the area
and while the OPP
conducts ground and air searches
for the suspect, they advised residents
to lock their doors, stay inside
and call 911
if they have any information.
Teresa was starting
to get very worried.
She called and texted Carol
urging her friend to call
and confirm she was OK.
Over at 48-year-old
Natalie Warmerdam's house
she was at home eating breakfast.
Also in the house
was her 20-year-old son, Adrian
who was lying on the couch watching TV.
Her daughter Valerie
was at school.
All of a sudden, Adrian heard a scream
from the other room where her mother was.
He thought maybe she was
just startled by a spider
but she screamed again,
louder.
Adrian ran over to check it out
and he saw his mother running towards him
with someone chasing her, pointing
a shotgun at her.
He then recognized the man as
Basil Barutski, someone
he hadn't seen for a while
given it had been three years since
he and Natalie had broken up.
Adrian feared
for his life and he ran.
Barefoot, he exited the back door
and as he ran across the field
and into the bush to hide, he heard
a single gunshot.
As he laid on his stomach, hiding
in the bush, he called 911
on his cell phone to tell them
that his mother was under attack
and that's where he stayed
until the police came.
48-year-old
Natalie Warmedam's body
was found on the staircase.
A shell casing from a
12-gauge shotgun was found nearby.
Natalie's
18-year-old daughter
Valerie was at high school
at the time of the lockdown.
Classwork stopped
and the students wondered
aloud why they could not leave
the premises.
After a time, Valerie's name
was broadcast over the intercom
to come to the principal's office
and she told them
that she was going to leave the premises
and that she was going to leave
the premises to come to the principal's office
and she instinctively
knew that Basile Borutski
was somehow involved.
Not long after, she was given
the tragic news that
her mother had been killed.
Real estate agent
Cathy Pitts was scheduled
to meet Carol Colletton
at 11am that morning.
But when she arrived
a window was smashed
and the door looked like it had been kicked open.
Cathy was uncomfortable
entering the property alone
so she went to a neighbour for help
and they returned together.
At first, nothing else
seemed out of place
until Cathy got to the bedroom
and saw what she thought was a rolled up sleeping bag.
But then
she realised it wasn't.
It was a person.
It was Carol.
There was no blood
but Carol was unresponsive.
Cathy called 911.
There was at least one more woman
to be concerned about
Basile's ex-wife Mary Ann.
The OPP
called her on her cell phone
as she was driving to a doctor's appointment
and told her to get to a safe place.
She immediately
drove to a provincial park
and stayed in the park office
waiting for police to give her the word
that it was safe.
By now, a police manhunt
had been established to locate Basile
with ground and air searches
continuing.
Multiple news reports were telling residents
to stay secure in their homes.
As well as schools
the OPP decided to put
the local Pembroke courthouse
on lockdown as a precaution
as well as several OPP detachments.
Renfrew Town Hall
was also evacuated
as a precaution
and staff were escorted to their vehicles.
Three women were dead
and the police didn't know
what else this man had planned.
It was clear that he was on a murder spree.
News spread quickly in the small communities
that make up Renfrew County.
People were exchanging stories
about what they'd heard.
Who were the three people who were dead?
Who was the suspect?
And why did it happen?
As the hours went by
warnings spread wider
than Renfrew County to Ottawa
and more than one site in that city
was placed on lockdown
and added police presence
was seen at the Ottawa Courthouse.
Meanwhile
Basel's neighbour
Sherle
was wondering what was going on.
It was now after lunchtime
and she hadn't seen her car
all day.
Where had Basel gone with it?
At almost 2pm
she got a text message.
It was Basel.
He told Sherle that her car was at
Carroll's Cottage at the lake.
Quote
Bye friend.
The police were tracing Basel's cell phone
and a command centre had been set up
on a side road near where his phone
had been traced to.
Basel had been tracked east
near a hunting cabin owned by relatives.
Dozens of police officers were involved now
from both the Ontario Provincial Police
and the Ottawa Regional Police Services.
Helicopters were circling overhead.
There was now widespread fear
in Renfrew County.
No one could rest until the shooter
had been captured.
Ottawa police were put in touch
with Basel's brother, Arthur Barutski.
They wanted him to
cooperate with police
and text message with his brother
and frame the messages so that Basel
would surrender peacefully.
After some messaging back
and forward, Arthur texted
quote
He then raised his hands
and surrendered to the police.
The five hour manhunt
was over.
The police announced they had arrested
a suspect although they wouldn't release
his name until charges were laid.
As the loved ones
of Natalie Warmedam, Anastasia Kuzik
and Carol O'Rourke
were sent to the police station
to report to the police
that they had been arrested.
As the victims of
Natalie Warmedam, Anastasia Kuzik
and Carol Colletton came to terms
with their loss, local residents
were able to breathe a sigh of relief.
Basel Barutski was taken to the
Pembroke OPP Detachment
where he spent the night.
The next morning, Detective Sergeant
Kaylee O'Neill arrived to interrogate him.
O'Neill brought coffee
and breakfast for Basel, which he ate
as the detective tried to get him to talk.
Firstly, by explaining his role
and asking Basel
if he understood what was going on,
Basel was quick
to establish himself as a reluctant
participant who had multiple
issues with police officers.
He could not be described
as cooperative.
He was disinterested and he was
nonchalant.
Early on, he stated that he did not
murder those women
with special emphasis on the word
murder. He said he killed them
implying that murder is
wrong and killing isn't.
He cited
his own reading of the Ten Commandments
which he said he believed
would provide vindication,
saying he consulted his personal
Bible on the eve of the murders.
Detective O'Neill
asked him to explain.
Basel spoke about his own studies
of the Bible. In fact,
he'd been reading it the night before
the murders.
The five hour interrogation
was released to the public,
but I've selected just a few quotes to
play to give an indication of how
Basel sounded as he spoke
and I'll summarize the rest.
Clips have been edited slightly
to remove long gaps and silence.
In this clip, Basel quotes
what he says as one of the Ten Commandments
as justification for what he did.
O'Neill corrects
him, but Basel insists
he is right.
What's the difference between killing and murder?
That would show
I'm not a murderer.
Commandments.
Mm-hmm.
So it's killing and justified.
Is that what you're getting at?
I'm just saying that.
I believe it's actually that
she'll not kill.
If you're wrong, you better start reading
the Bible.
Yeah?
Find an old version
before they change it.
Detective Sergeant O'Neill was clearly
just reading from the wrong version
of the Bible. He moved on
to the next question.
Why would a guy have
a U-Chill who was a women?
Basel, that seems kind of counterintuitive.
No.
What reason could there be for that?
No, to me it seemed
like
it seemed like
God was trying
to show me that the commandment
is a thou shalt
not kill.
It is thou shalt not murder
and that
when somebody
it's murder to kill
somebody
that's innocent.
That's why
I couldn't kill myself
because
I thought about shooting myself
but I can't do that
because I am innocent. I didn't do it wrong.
Because that would be me murdering
myself.
Does that make any
sense?
So in terms of Carol
and Anastasia and Natalie
would you say you killed them or murdered them?
I killed them because they were
not
innocent.
They were guilty.
I was innocent.
I
done nothing wrong.
Basel painted a self-portrait
of a man who was a chronic victim.
None of what happened
was his fault. He was wronged
by all his previous partners
who he called by polar,
loony and crazy.
He accused them all of framing
him. He claimed he was also
wronged by what he described
as a corrupt police system.
He sat with one arm across his chest
and the other holding the side
of his head. He repeatedly said
he was the victim of
malicious prosecution
by the police and that no one
ever listened to him. He said the police
had even framed him for his
DUI. When asked
if he wanted to call a lawyer, he said
I don't want to talk
to any crooks.
Basel Barutski's complaints
and criticisms didn't end there.
He complained about the lack
of humanity in his treatment
by police after he was arrested.
He requested a doctor
citing chronic back pain.
He complained about health problems,
a vitamin deficiency,
four ruptured discs, a hernia,
a history of concussions
about the medications he was on.
He also declared that he had
PTSD because of his
treatment at the hands of the criminal
justice system.
He was asked
what had the women done to make him
so angry that he decided to kill them.
He said that
if the community really wanted to know
they should start an independent
inquiry.
Because Basel Barutski is a kind,
caring, god-fearing
human being.
He had referred to himself in the third person
quite a few times throughout
this interrogation.
One by one he listed
what he perceived to be
slights against him by his ex-partners.
Each slight
as ridiculous as the last.
Mary Ann
was the one who beat him up,
not the other way round.
Natalie was apparently in
with a man stealing backhoes
and accused her of trying to frame him
for it.
And as for Carol,
she had simply rejected him after he did
all that work on her cottage.
After a few hours of
back and forth and continued references
to the Bible, as well as
his lack of sleep,
Basel Barutski told his version
of what happened the morning
of September 22nd
2015.
He said he left his apartment
just after 7.30am,
taking off in his neighbor
Schill's car.
He said as he drove the car
he felt that God was helping him
to do what's right.
He had a 12-gauge
shotgun with him that he told police
he found at an old farmhouse
two years earlier.
As you'll remember, he had a lifetime
ban on weapons and his
firearms license had been revoked,
but he still carried the
expired permit card around
with him.
Basel said he drove about 15 minutes
northwest to Carol Colletton's
cottage on Kamineskag Lake.
She saw him arrive
and he said something to her like
why do you hate me?
She went inside and locked the door.
He smashed the window open
with his elbow,
unlocked the front door and entered the cottage.
She said,
this is not you Basel, this is not you.
He chased
Carol to her bedroom, grabbed
a coaxial television cable
and wrapped it around her head and neck
six times while she begged for
her life.
He strangled her.
As Carol lay dead on the bedroom floor
with numerous defensive injuries
and bruises on her hands and arms
Basel smoked a cigarette.
He discarded the butt
in Carol's kitchen sink
along with his DNA.
He emptied out the contents of her purse
and took her cell phone
and the keys to her car.
He left Shell's car
parked at the cottage
with $100 in it for gas
and then fled in Carol's car.
At this point
no one had any idea
that a killing spree had started.
Basel drove about
half an hour northeast
to Wilno where Anastasia Kuzik lived.
He arrived
at around 8.45am.
After the
confrontation with her sister Ava
who fled out the house on foot
Basel said he located Anna
cowering behind the kitchen island.
He asked her
why did you lie in court
and she said, I didn't.
He fired the gun
killing her with a single shot.
A 12 gauge shell casing
was found near her body
along with a fingerprint that matched
to Basel.
Next he drove another half an hour
this time southeast
to the farm of Natalie Wormadam.
The same farm
where he lived for two years.
Surveillance footage shows
him walking into her house with a shotgun.
He chased her around
the corner with that shotgun
as her son ran out of the house
and then he fired one shot
also killing her instantly.
The same size shell casing
was found near her body.
Two minutes later
surveillance footage captured him
walking back out.
By 9.20am
three women were dead
and Basel told
each of these stories without
a shred of remorse or even emotion.
He was completely
nonchalant.
As you'll remember
his complaint about Natalie
was that she was apparently in
a stealing back hose
and had tried to frame him.
According to sources close to Natalie
she had nothing to do
with whatever went on
but Basel decided that this man
would be his next target.
The man owned a sawmill
so Basel said he drove there
and asked around for him.
He was told that he wasn't there.
Basel decided to leave.
In reality
the owner knew that Basel was there
and was hiding in the bushes
a decision which saved his
life.
Basel drove around for a bit
before heading out east to
Kinburn, Ontario where a relative
had a property.
Just before 2pm
he parked the car on the outskirts of town
sat down at a picnic table
and texted his neighbour
to let her know where her car was.
He then ran into the bush
with a few bottles of liquor
along with the shotgun.
His plan was to drink himself stupid
and then die by self inflicted
gunshot.
But he decided not to.
Quote,
Yeah, you can't do that Basel.
You're innocent. If you blow your head off
you'll never go to heaven.
Just 30 minutes later
he was arrested.
He pointed to where the shotgun was
so police could take it.
It was an old, rusty
gun determined to be in poor condition
but it worked.
Police also found ammunition
which matched the shell casings
found at the crime scene.
They also found a note that read
I have no gun.
Don't murder me. I give up.
And inside the car that
he stole, Carol's car
they found a large machete.
As you remember
the police had warned
Basel's ex-wife Mary Ann
to find a safe space
but when he was asked about her
he told police he hadn't actually
thought of including Mary Ann
in the day's plans.
At the end of the confession
Detective O'Neill asked Basel
if he understood what happened
to Anna, Carol and Natalie
was wrong.
Basel replied
yeah.
O'Neill asked
would you take it back if you could?
Basel replied
of course I would
but then continued on into another rant
about how Natalie, Carol and Anna
brought it upon themselves.
He also said that he was
prepared to shoot any police officer
that got in his way.
The only shred of remorse he
showed was the fact that he
borrowed his neighbour's car
and left her gas tank empty.
During the interrogation
Detective O'Neill repeatedly
offered him legal counsel
but he turned it down.
With Basel Baruchski finally
captured the Renfrew County
community were feeling safer
but still reeling in shock
especially those who knew
Carol, Natalie and Anastasia.
As for Basel's family
his estranged brother Will
told the Canadian press
that they were angry and embarrassed.
Quote
We're all in disbelief.
Right now the only ones we're thinking about
is the victims, the children,
the families, the friends.
Our hearts and souls go out
to them.
By now the media had started reporting
on who Basel was
including his criminal past
and all the times he had evaded
conviction.
There was a lot of outrage at how
this man with his history
of escalating violence towards women
was allowed to return to the
community time and time again
even through multiple breaches
of probation orders.
Kathy Pitts, the real estate
agent who discovered Carol
Colletton's body, told CTV
News, quote
Back out on the loose.
My heart just bleeds for the families
of these women and what they have to go through.
Women's
advocate groups had started to point
out that this, the worst
ever case of intimate partner violence
in Ontario, wasn't
receiving the kind of public attention
it deserved.
Many media outlets noted that
the murders happened in the middle of
the 2015 federal election
campaign.
After, the three main political leaders
were supposed to have a debate
on women's issues.
The debate had actually been cancelled
a month earlier under controversy
but the media noted that
none of the three political leaders
made a single public
comment about the massacre
as they campaigned.
This absence was a missed opportunity
to educate the public about
domestic violence and the
red flags that Basel was at
a high risk to continue
re-offending, like his repeated
refusal to follow his probation
conditions.
As journalist, Sadia Ansari
wrote in a blog post for
the Huffington Post, quote
A mass shooting
fuelled by misogyny is no doubt
a national tragedy.
So how many women have to die
before this issue warrants the political
attention it deserves?
As Basel had
his first appearance in court
where he remained absolutely
silent, a women's support
group gathered outside the building
to hold a vigil.
Joanne Brooks, director of the women's
sexual assault centre of Renfrew
County, was one of the organisers.
Quote
When these events happen in communities
what happens is it triggers
rawness for many women.
We all live with the threat of violence
and I think it's important to be out
publicly visible for the women who
cannot come forward.
The group were there again
for Basel's second appearance in court
a few weeks later.
This time, he uttered just one
word. When he was asked
to identify himself, he said
God.
It seemed fitting given what the
police had found in his apartment.
They seized three books
the Bible, the Jerusalem Bible
and a book called The Key to
Freedom which is essentially
the Bible rewritten in
contemporary English.
The police also seized
various writings they found from
Basel to be used for handwriting
analysis against the messages
that he wrote all around Carol's
cottage.
Packed
memorial services were held for the
three women who were loved and missed
by many. There were strong
undercurrents of anger at how the
massacre was allowed to have
happened.
Anastasia Kuzik was described
as a lover of nature and a friend
to everyone. Bagpipers
played amazing grace
in a hall that featured walls
of photos as well as a
giant display of the many
ribbons she'd won in horse-riding
competitions. Her family
asked for donations in her memory
to be made to the local women's
shelter.
She gathered to memorialise Carol
Colettin, described her as
wonderful, someone who loved
all animals. Friends
said Carol didn't know the extent
of Basel's past and because
she was such a trusting person
she gave him the benefit of
the doubt.
Natalie Wormadam was remembered
as someone who smiled with her
whole face and had an
infectious laugh.
Her friend, Daniel
Rosie, told the crowd that the
justice system had let Natalie
down and they needed to channel
their anger into bringing about
change in the justice system.
Quote, we need a system that
works differently in cases of
abuse against women. We need
a justice system that puts the
protection of the victims over
the rights of the abuser.
In the meantime, CBC
were investigating for the
Fifth Estate. They had requested
a phone call with Basel
from prison and to their
surprise he called back in the
months after the murders.
But it was more of the same as
what he said in the interrogation.
He'd been wronged. It was the
police's fault. It was the women's
fault. It was the system's fault.
In the end, he declared,
you're judging me and hung up.
True to their word, the women's
support group was organizing
again for the one-year anniversary
of the Renfrew County murders.
Dozens attended
a candlelight memorial to remember
the three women. They marched
through the streets holding signs
that read, take back the
night in reference to the movement
to end domestic violence.
Natalie Warmadam, Carol
Coletton and Anastasia
Kuzik's names were etched
into a monument that had been
erected in memory of more than
20 women killed by their
partner or ex-partner.
Many were reflecting on
how gaps in the justice system
allowed this to happen and how
one year on, Renfrew
County was no safer
for abused women than before.
According
to Statistics Canada, a woman
is killed by her partner every
five days on average and
women in rural areas
are even more susceptible.
They are often put at a disadvantage
because of traditional moral
and religious beliefs in rural areas.
Women also feel
they can't leave an abusive relationship
for financial reasons.
Often, their livelihood
is tied to a farm.
But they're also afraid to leave because
everyone knows everybody else
in these areas.
There's isolation and poverty.
There's also the fact that many of the
men are hunters, so have
access to firearms and other weapons.
In cases like
this massacre and the fact that
Basel was allowed to get away with
not following his probation orders
repeatedly, hardly
encourage women to step forward
or trust the system.
And what's worse, Joanne
Brooks from the Women's Sexual
Assault Centre of Renfrew County
told the media about a disturbing
trend.
Several women they helped at the centre
reported that their abusive
partners had started using the name
of Basel Borutski as a threat.
She said that while
there had been improvements in the
justice system to warn women
who are at risk when a man is released
from jail, quote,
at the end of the day, if a man chooses
to kill a woman, it will happen.
There are restraining orders
and bail conditions, but those just
get walked right through, especially
in rural areas where we
are isolated without services.
We don't have neighbours that
might call us and say, I just
saw him coming your way down the street.
We don't have neighbours
necessarily.
Basel Borutski's
trial started in October
of 2017,
just over two years after
he murdered three women.
He was charged with two counts
of first-degree murder for
Anastasia Kuzik and Natalie
Wormadam and one count
of second-degree murder in the death
of Carol Colletton.
This suggests that he did not plan
to murder Carol, who was the first
victim, but then
he did plan on driving
to Anastasia's and Natalie's
and killing them.
In the lead-up to the trial,
the 59-year-old was ordered
to have a psychiatric test,
but he refused to comply.
When asked what his name was,
he said, I don't know.
When asked what people call him,
he said, asshole.
The psychiatrist reported
back to the court that an attempt
was made, but due to Basel's
non-compliance, the assessment
wasn't possible.
Basel was no different at the trial.
As the judge would put it,
he decided not to actively
participate in his own defense,
despite repeated requests
by the court.
He refused to hire a lawyer
or request legal aid.
He just sat there in the prisoner's box,
staring straight ahead.
In cases like this,
the court can appoint what is called
an amicus curie,
which means friend of the court.
In Basel Borutski's case,
the roll assisted the trial process
by offering him information,
expertise, and insight.
In the opening address,
the crown prosecutor argued that
the trial is not a who-done-it,
because the evidence that was going
to be presented is overwhelming.
It was clear that the killings
were all about justice,
his kind of justice.
He believed there was a corrupt justice
system out to get him,
and women paid the ultimate price.
Quote,
he thought about it before he did it,
and then he executed his plan perfectly.
The videotaped
interrogation where Basel
explained his twisted logic
would become the centerpiece
of the crown's considerable evidence.
Other evidence
included testimony from Carol's
new partner, the one she had
just gotten back together with
about Basel's erratic behavior
leading up to the murders,
the unannounced visits,
the botched projects that Carol never asked for,
and the jealous,
possessive behavior.
There was blood on Basel's clothes
that matched to Natalie and Anna,
and his fingerprint was found
at Anna's house,
the cigarette butt in the sink of Carol's
cottage with his DNA on it.
Surveillance footage showed him
pulling out of his apartment block
in his neighbour's Schirl's car,
which was recovered from Carol's cottage.
Inside Schirl's car
was his wallet containing
all his ID and bank cards,
and his expired firearms permit,
as well as a hundred dollars
for gas, as per
his text message to Schirl
just before he was arrested.
Surveillance from Natalie's house
showed him going in and coming out
minutes later.
There was a lot of evidence.
Anastasia's sister, Ava,
testified about the 911
call she'd made when Basel entered
the house.
At this point, Basel suddenly
came to life, tapping on the glass
and asking for a piece of paper.
Basel had questions
for Ava, which he wrote on the paper.
The amicus curie
asked the questions,
saving Ava from having to give
her answers to Basel himself
in the prisoner's box.
The questions were not
overly poignant.
She was asked where she was in the house
and when she first saw the gun.
There was no explanation about
why the questions were asked,
or what he was trying to infer
by way of defence.
As you'll remember, Basel
was a prolific writer.
Carol Colletton's brother
testified about a letter Carol's neighbour
gave him in the days after the murders.
It was postmarked
from a rapids Ontario,
the town where Basel lived.
Kevin knew immediately that it was
evidence so he took the envelope
straight to the police, unopened.
The letter was entered
into evidence.
A rambling nine page
missive that starts
Carol, positive, positive, positive.
Basel then writes about
what he thinks are the positive
changes he made in her life
and his motivation for it.
I am a loving, caring human
being. I am a good person.
I am living in a world where
society teaches us to be greedy.
And at the end,
he says, talk to me,
it's not too late.
The trial
was supposed to have lasted for 17 weeks,
but instead
lasted six, thanks to
Basel's refusal to participate.
There was no defence
put forward whatsoever.
No witnesses were called.
He did come to life for a second
time halfway through the judge's
instructions to the jury.
When asked if he had any comment
about it, he responded by
complaining about the trial process,
about not being able to address
the jury and that he wasn't
given a pencil and paper
when he was.
And at the end of the jury charge
he was again given the opportunity
to comment. He simply said
I am not guilty.
The jury did not
agree. Basel Borutski
was found guilty of the two
counts of first degree murder and
the one count of second degree murder.
At the sentencing hearing,
the judge described him as being
devoid of mercy.
He said that for the family
and friends of the women,
the effect the losses had on them
is incalculable, particularly
for Anna's sister Ava
and Natalie's son Adrian
who were there at the time of the attacks
and will have to carry those
memories for the rest of their lives.
Justice Robert Moranga
quoted Natalie
Wormadam's mother from her victim
impact statement.
There's a huge hole in our lives
and in our hearts.
Daily we walk under a black cloud.
Our health and family
dynamics have been sorely
affected due to everlasting
stress and sorrow.
The justice also
referred to a community
impact statement that had been
submitted by a group called
End Violence Against Women
in Renfrew County.
Basel Borutski's murder spree
had an incredible impact on the community.
The lines of police
cars on the rural roads,
serious safety concerns
as schools and businesses were locked down.
The statement said
that women still don't feel safe
walking on rural roads or hiking
and what's worse
in Renfrew County during hunting season,
the sounds of gunshot
was considered normal.
But since the murders,
the gunshots were now triggering awful memories.
Quote,
the sight of police vehicles
once a symbol of safety and security for many
are now a reminder
of these horrific murders
and fears of future violence.
Basel Borutski was sentenced
to life in prison
with no chance of parole for 70 years,
which will bring him
to around 128 years old.
He will die
in prison.
The judge characterised him as a violent,
vindictive, calculating
abuser of women
who, on September 22nd,
2015,
took his hatred to its ultimate climax
and committed the triple murders
of Carol Colletton,
Anastasia Kuzik
and Natalie Walmadam.
Outside court,
Natalie's daughter Valerie
spoke to CBC News
about the difficulty moving forward with her life,
without her mother's advice
and help, as well as her experiences
not being able to trust people.
She said she was glad
to see the increased awareness
and was hoping and waiting
to hear about what changes might be made
to the justice system.
Ironically,
the sentencing decision was delivered
on the anniversary of the
1989 Ecole Polytechnique Massacre,
which became the national day
of remembrance and action
on violence against women.
Outside the courthouse,
flags flew at half-mast
to commemorate this anniversary.
Also, the day women
in Renfrew County learned
Basel Borutski
will never be a threat to them again.
In August of 2019,
the Ontario Government
announced an inquiry
to examine the circumstances of the deaths
of Natalie, Carol and Anna.
Even though this was good news,
their loved ones and the community
were wary.
Natalie's daughter Valerie
told CBC that she hoped
the inquest would do some good
but added that recommendations are good
and well, but what's really needed
is for politicians to follow
through and implement them.
Women's rights advocates
noted that there had been similar
inquests held over the years,
only to see recommendations shelved
afterwards. They wondered
how another inquest would help
without actually following through.
Whatever happens,
for many, the inquiry is
too little, too late.
Basel Borutski showed an escalation
of violence and stalking
behaviour and never stuck to
the conditions of his probation
and the system failed to protect
the survivors.
Most notably, by letting him
get away with not following his
probation orders and secondly
by not letting the women know
when he was released from prison.
There has been no
great set for the inquiry.
Thanks for listening and thanks
to Deirdre Bradley for researching
this case. As well as court
documents, this episode relied
on the reporting and journalism
of Sarah Boesveld for Shatterlane
Magazine, Aidan Helmer
for The Ottawa Citizen and Judy
Marin for CBC News.
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