Canadian True Crime - 91 The Murder of Robin Greene - Part 1
Episode Date: June 1, 2021[ Part 1 of 2 ]MANITOBA | In 2003, the day after Canada Day, a 33 year old man walked through the front door of the Winnipeg Remand Centre. He said he’d woken up in his hotel room ...and there was a dead, dismembered body in the bathtub. He insisted he blanked out and couldn’t remember committing the murder.The circumstances of the case were shocking and unbelievable enough, but within a few days a hollywood angle involving a stolen celebrity necklace ended up being the main headline. Eventually, the case caught the attention of amateur writer Dan Zupansky, who would land an opportunity that he couldn’t refuse. An opportunity to get the truth from Sydney, and get justice for Robin Greene—no matter what it took.More information:Dan Zupansky’s book: Trophy Kill: The Shall We Dance Murder by Dan ZupanskyTrue Murder podcast: https://www.blogtalkradio.com/dan-zupansky1Podcast recommendation:COMMONS: Real Estate!Thanks for supporting our sponsors!See the special offer codes here Don't like the ads?Access early episodes without the ads plus bonus content and more on Patreon and Supercast. Learn more Website and social medias:Website: www.canadiantruecrime.caFacebook: facebook.com/CanadianTrueCrimeTwitter: @CanadianTCpodInstagram: @CanadianTrueCrimePodInstagram: @kristileehelloCredits:Research: Haley GrayWriting: Kristi LeeAudio editing and production: We Talk of DreamsDisclaimer voiced by the host of TrueTheme Song: We Talk of DreamsAll credits and information sources can be found on the page for this episode at canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes after it's released to the main feed. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi there. This is part one of a two-part series. You'll have part two in 24 hours,
and if you're a supporter on Patreon and Supercast, you'll see it in your feed right now.
If you've been listening to True Crime Podcast for a while, you'll likely know about True Murder,
hosted by Dan Zipanski. Today, I'm covering the case that he wrote his book about and inspired
him to start his podcast, and you'll also hear from him in this series. If you have no idea what
I'm talking about, don't worry, you will learn everything in this episode. Now, this series
requires an additional content warning. It's an extremely graphic case and contains descriptions
of a gruesome murder and dismemberment that may be distressing to hear. Only the necessary details
are given, and it won't be gratuitous, but please take care when listening. And lastly,
please note that the views expressed in this series, particularly in part two,
do not necessarily reflect my views. And with that, it's on with the show.
Canadian True Crime is a completely independent production funded through advertising and direct
donations. The podcast contains course language, adult themes, and content of a violent and
disturbing nature. Listener discretion is advised. The morning of July 2, 2003, the day after Canada
Day, a 33-year-old man walked through the door of the Winnipeg Remand Centre. At 5'8", 220 pounds,
with a boyish and dimpled face wearing wire-rimmed glasses, he didn't appear to be any kind of threat.
He walked up to the shift supervisor and told him that he had just woken up in his hotel room
and there was a dead body in the bathtub. The supervisor of the Remand Centre picked up
the phone, dialed the police, and handed it to him. The man grabbed the phone and told the operator
his name was Sidney Tierhuse, and he thinks he may have killed someone the day before.
Quote, I chopped up the guy, I blacked out, and when I woke up, I found the body in the bathtub.
He said the knife he must have used was still on the floor of the bathroom.
The details were so outrageous that police initially believed it must have been a prank call,
but they dispatched investigators to the Remand Centre anyway to double-check in person.
Sidney told them that the remains were still in the room he'd been renting at a low-end hotel
and live music venue called the Royal Albert Arms Hotel.
Once police arrived at the room, they saw that this was no prank. There were beer bottles and
multiple pairs of blood-stained underwear. There was a bed sheet on the floor which was covered
in blood, so was the mattress which had visible knife slashes all over it. And there was blood
spatter all over the wall next to the bed. Officers saw a button-down shirt stuffed into
the air vent, most likely in an attempt to stop any odor from leaving Sidney's room.
It was 38 or 39 degrees Celsius in the room, about 100 degrees Fahrenheit, so very hot.
One officer entered the bathroom and there lay one of the most horrific sights he'd ever seen,
a sight he'd never forget even with his years of experience. There in the claw-foot bathtub
lay the body of a man who had been decapitated, dismembered and crudely reassembled.
And next to it lay a pile of the victim's clothes which had been neatly folded.
The autopsy would determine that the man had been stabbed to death 68 times in the chest,
neck and upper arms, and there were no defensive wounds whatsoever. The body had been completely
drained of blood. Every single one of his internal organs were missing and what remained had been
cut, dissected or mutilated and repositioned. The police searched the hotel room, the garbage
dumpsters and even the plumbing, but did not locate those organs. And while it would have taken
some time to perform all of these acts, Sidney claimed that he couldn't remember any of it.
In the bathroom, police found the butcher knife that Sidney said would be there under the sink.
They also found a paring knife on top of the medicine cabinet.
And on a desk in the hotel room, police found a necklace that looked like it might be expensive.
It was. This necklace had a celebrity angle that would come out later. 33-year-old Sidney
Tierhuse was taken back to the station, arrested and charged with second-degree murder. Sidney
told the police that he'd met the man the day before at a bar and they'd gone back to his hotel
room for drinks and consensual sex. Sidney said that he got so drunk that he eventually passed
out and woke up to find the body just like that. He admitted that he must have been the one who
killed the man, but he couldn't remember any of it. The police didn't know the real story
of what had happened here, but by Sidney's own admission, the perpetrator was now in custody
so the investigation could begin.
I'm Kristi, 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.
The man who lost his life was identified as 38-year-old Robin Robert Green.
Robin was born in 1965 and had lived all his life in Shoal Lake First Nation,
an Ojibwe Soto reserve about 150 kilometres east of Winnipeg. His father, Robin Sr, was an elder
there. Not much else is publicly known about Robin Jr and the awful circumstances of this case have
been sensationalised by certain media outlets in ways that have greatly upset his family.
All that's publicly known is this. It was Canada Day weekend 2003 and Robin Green travelled to
Winnipeg to meet up with his sister and enjoy the festivities. Tragically, he was killed.
Sydney Tierhus told investigators that all he could remember was this. He'd met Robin on Canada
Day, they went back to his hotel room for drinks and consensual sex. He said he was so intoxicated
that he must have blacked out because when he woke up, he had no memory of what had happened.
The story seemed unbelievable, so police looked for others at the hotel who may have interacted
with Sydney. According to the shocked hotel owner, Sydney had arrived about three weeks beforehand
and had paid $290 to book the room for a month. So far, his stay had been incident-free. Sydney
had been seen drinking at the hotel's bar on Canada Day, the day before he turned himself in.
Investigators spoke to the bartender, a woman called Diane. According to court documents,
she said she saw Sydney two times that day. The first time was at about 2.30 in the afternoon,
when he came in by himself and ordered one beer. About 30 minutes later, Diane said that the night
bartender and his girlfriend arrived and Sydney went to sit with them for a while before taking off.
Investigators tracked down that night bartender and asked if Sydney appeared intoxicated at this
point and he replied that while he obviously couldn't say for sure, Sydney didn't appear to be drunk
and had no trouble walking and talking at that time. Diane said that an hour or so later,
Sydney returned to the bar, but this time he was accompanied by an indigenous man with long,
straight, jet-black hair, who he introduced as his cousin. It was, of course, 38-year-old Robin
Green. Sydney asked Diane to watch his cousin while he went to get ice, and she noticed that Robin
was clearly intoxicated and could barely stand up. But Sydney, on the other hand, seemed completely
fine walking and talking as though he was sober. She watched as Sydney and Robin headed to the
elevator to return upstairs. Only one of them would still be alive in the morning.
Investigators also spoke to the Remand Center supervisor where Sydney turned himself in.
He did not appear drunk to him, and the police phone operator said the exact same thing.
Something didn't seem to be adding up here.
Here's where the celebrity angle comes in, an angle that the police say was pretty inconsequential
to the case, yet ended up becoming a main feature of it. The City of Toronto is a popular place
for shooting movies, and in 2003 a Miramax movie was scheduled to be shooting there. But at the
time there was an outbreak of SARS, a coronavirus like the one that has caused the COVID-19 pandemic.
One patient brought it to Toronto early on, and it caused a public health emergency that
lasted for four months, with all hospitals creating units to care for SARS patients.
There were lockdowns and quarantines, and the World Health Organization issued a travel advisory
urging people to avoid travelling to Toronto. Vacations were cancelled, large conventions
were postponed, and movie shoots were relocated. One of those movies was Shall We Dance, a big
budget remake of a 1966 Japanese film about a bored businessman who finds a new passion for dancing.
When Toronto became a no-go because of SARS, Miramax decided to relocate the film to Winnipeg,
for filming over the summer of 2003. Locals in the know were super excited to hear that
several big-name stars would be in town filming. Richard Gere would be playing the bored businessman.
Susan Sarandon had taken the role of his wife, and Jennifer Lopez was cast as a ballroom dance
instructor. Now Susan Sarandon's character had to wear some expensive jewellery, including an
antique gold necklace with an amber pendant that was reportedly worth around $4,000. The necklace,
as well as some of Susan's other jewellery, had been put into a ziplock bag that was stolen from
the movie set. And that necklace was found near Robin Greene's remains in the hotel room,
but that's all the police would say about it. It didn't take long before the entertainment
press started to jump on the case, with Hollywood.com declaring that, quote,
a strange connection has been uncovered between Susan Sarandon and a grisly murder in Canada.
The New York Post announced, gay slay tied to film heist. There were reports that Robin Greene
had snuck onto the set of Shall We Dance and stolen the necklace himself before he met Sydney
Tierhuse, but this story has never been verified. In the meantime, as Sydney Tierhuse waited in
prison for his court date to come around, he soon caught the attention of another inmate at the same
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Dan Zepanski is widely considered the godfather of true crime podcasting. One of the originals
who was recording before many of us even knew what a podcast was. The first episode of his podcast
True Murder was released in 2010. You are now listening to True Murder, the most shocking
killers in true crime history, and the authors that have written about them.
Originally from Thunder Bay, Ontario, Dan Zepanski relocated to Winnipeg, Manitoba in the 90s,
and at the time Robin Greene was murdered, Dan produced and hosted a talk radio program called
Off the Cuff on the University of Manitoba radio station. He was also a vocal critic of the Canadian
justice system not being tough enough on crime and had started working for a local law reform
group called People for Justice. His main concern was the growing number of murder charges being
reduced to manslaughter on a plea deal. In 2003, Dan Zepanski was following the news developments
on the murder of Robin Greene, collecting clippings as they came out. And based on what he was reading,
he had a feeling that the same thing would happen with Sydney Teahuse. He'd have his second degree
murder charges reduced to manslaughter. Dan thought it was absurd that Sydney claimed he was so
intoxicated he couldn't remember murdering and interfering with the remains of Robin Greene.
But Dan's bigger issue was this. Because Sydney was the only witness to the crime,
Dan believed that the prosecution would not be able to successfully convict him of murder
and would have to settle for manslaughter. And then Sydney would be out in just a few years.
Dan had no plans to do anything about the case, but then, six months after the murder,
something dropped into his lap. In January of 2004, he received a phone call from an old high
school friend called Don Abbott, who happened to be serving a prison sentence in Winnipeg.
And Abbott had some news he thought Dan might be interested in. Sydney Teahuse was in the same prison.
Dan immediately saw an opportunity. He asked his friend to see if Sydney would be interested
in being interviewed for a story on the case and the upcoming trial. After Sydney said yes,
Dan got to thinking, there would be many people interested, so maybe he should write a book on
the case. Dan was an amateur writer, but he'd never written a book before. And while he was
up to the challenge, he knew that there was a lot of research that needed to be done.
So he was surprised but delighted when his friend Abbott suggested that he apply to share a cell
with Sydney Teahuse because it might help with the research for the book. Abbott's request was
approved and he and Sydney were paired together as cellmates. There was an understanding that Abbott
would be given a share of the profits from the book sales in exchange for his help. The plan was
that Abbott would make friends with Sydney, gain his trust and then get him to open up to Dan
Zapansky about his life, starting from his childhood right up until he murdered Robin Green.
And through sharing a cell, Abbott would get some extra insight into Sydney in case any of it turned
out to be important. Dan wanted a carrot to dangle in front of Sydney that would inspire him to open
up and he had an idea. He would say that he knew that the Manitoba government was drafting legislation
that prevented criminals profiting from their crimes afterwards and he could see a window of
opportunity that was fast closing. He would offer Sydney 30% of the profits from the sale of the book
he was going to write. Sydney jumped on it and after a few weeks he invited Dan Zapansky to visit
him in prison for the first time. Dan would say he was a bit nervous but wanted to establish an
in-person rapport which they did. After that Dan interviewed him by phone several times but Sydney
said he didn't like that their conversations were recorded so he preferred to write letters
because they apparently weren't read. From that point on letters would be their main point of
correspondence. Dan would say that he did consider the ethics of what he had offered Sydney in
exchange for his story but he decided that he was okay with lying since his intentions were in the
right place and he knew the legislation that would make it illegal for Sydney to profit was close to
being finalised. He had no intention of paying up but regardless of intentions what Dan didn't seem
to consider at the time was the potential impact that promise of money might have on the story that
Sydney would share. Sydney Tierhus also goes by the name Sydney Tierhus Moore but he was not born
with those names. He told Dan Zapansky that he was born Sydney Owens in 1969 in Little Grand Rapids
First Nation an Ojibwe Soto reserve about 370 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.
According to Sydney his biological mother was a teenager and as a baby he was taken from her by
child welfare. It should be noted that this happened right in the middle of the 60s scoop
where the Canadian government enabled child welfare authorities to take indigenous children
from their families and place them with middle-class white families to be fostered and adopted.
Many of them experienced documented physical, sexual, emotional and psychological abuse
all the while dealing with the trauma of being rounded up and taken from their families.
Sydney was placed with the Tierhus family a family of Dutch origin that had five children
four older biological children and one adopted. After fostering for a while the family would also
adopt Sydney when he was about three years old. According to Sydney while on the surface they
looked like a typical happy family behind closed doors things were very different. He had some
shocking stories to tell about his childhood stories that seemed too awful to be true. We'll go
through some of them here to give an overview and some context but we have to remember that many of
the things that Sydney told Dan Zapansky about his family and childhood are unable to be verified
but it should also be noted that Sydney would later give testimony about the same stories
while under oath. He said his adoptive father Garrett was physically and mentally abusive
and proud of it referring to the behaviour as the Tierhus religion. He reportedly ran the
house like a concentration camp. Sydney said that he never felt like he fitted in and he felt
ashamed of being adopted. He was jealous of schoolmates who had loving fathers and wanted
his own adoptive father dead. He tried to poison him several times but said he was caught by his
mum. In another story he told when he was 14 he tampered with the brakes on his father's car
in the hope of him dying in a car accident but that didn't work either. And Sydney's problems
with his family didn't end with his father. He had some more horrible stories to tell
that included being made to drink urine by one of his siblings and being beaten so bad by his
father that he couldn't sit for a week. And Sydney stated that he'd been sexually abused
by several different people in his adopted family including his older brother and his
mother Mariette. Sydney said that she often gave him special attention and time that his
father was resentful about. From his letters it's clear that Sydney has confused feelings about
his mother at some points describing how much he loved her and in others how much he hated her.
And while he said that Mariette was overprotective of him in other letters he told stories that
portray her as just as strict a disciplinarian as his father. For stepping on his sister's finger
and breaking her fingernail his mother locked him naked in a broom closet for three days and fed him
from a dog dish. On another occasion Sydney said he pushed the same sister down the stairs
and he was put in a burlap sack and locked in the trunk of a car overnight. Sydney said that
when he was seven he was molested by an older boy at a cub scout's sleepover at church. At 11
his music teacher allegedly asked him to stay behind after class and he was molested there.
According to Sydney he wasn't the only victim and the teacher was later convicted. At just 13
he began letting men sexually abuse him in exchange for money. He attempted suicide. He says he was
also assaulted by two friends of the family for years up until he was 17 years old. And for all
of this and the crime that he would go to jail for Sydney didn't have much of a criminal history.
At age 19 and 21 he was arrested for public intoxication. The next year he flashed a newspaper
delivery boy and was given two years probation although he gave the excuse that he'd only
gone to retrieve the paper in his underwear and that was it. When Sydney was about 20 his adopted
mother Mariette died of breast cancer. At around this time he decided to move away from Winnipeg
and spent time living and working in Vancouver and Edmonton over the next 10 years. He told
Dan Zupansky that he found more liberal minded people there especially in Vancouver and described
living there as a kind of utopia. But obviously still struggling to deal with his past trauma and
complicated feelings he developed a dependency on crack cocaine. He said he overdosed seven or eight
times and attended rehab on multiple occasions. Now this is when his writings started to take
a dark turn of a different kind. He also told Dan Zupansky at this time he discovered BDSM
particularly the SM part. Sadomasochism is where one person enjoys inflicting physical or mental
suffering on another person who derives pleasure from experiencing that pain. Sydney said he was
happy to be in either position whether it be submissive or dominant and told Dan that he would
often pick up drunk indigenous men coerce them to come home with him drug them and then quote
have my way with them. Sydney characterised this behaviour as BDSM but it's obviously plain rape.
Informed consent is required in any relationship especially the BDSM or kink community and
responsible participants have strict rules and guidelines around consent and boundaries
to prevent situations like this. In any event Sydney decided to try and get his life together
at this time in between bouts at rehab. He completed his high school education and then
earned a hospitality qualification from the native education centre. He also told Dan Zupansky that
around this time he got a woman pregnant but when the baby boy was born she took him to live in the
Seattle Washington area. Sydney decided to become a chef. He went back to school and earned his
culinary arts degree in 1996 when he was 27. Over the next few years he worked as an executive chef
in fine restaurants around Canada claiming to have cooked meals for Cher, Richard Gere and Margaret
Trudeau the wife of former Prime Minister Pierre Alliot Trudeau and of course the mother of current
Prime Minister Justin. But Sydney said he was also fascinated with death and claimed in 2001
he decided he wanted to be murdered cooked and cannibalised. He said he managed to find someone
who agreed to do it and said they selected a date purchased a large pressure cooker and were prepared
with sleeping pills. Sydney wrote that part of the agreement was that his new friend would
keep his bones in a trunk under the bed afterwards. But as the date they'd chosen drew closer the
friend abruptly changed his mind and pulled out but Sydney claimed it was still something he wanted
to do. Quote, I will wait to find the right man or men who'd be willing to have me on their dinner
table. In another letter he wrote that he liked to look up obituaries to find young men who had
recently died and would go to their graves. He said quote, only once did I dig a grave and open a coffin.
During this time he was still trying to deal with his drug dependency issues which were ruining his
life as he tried to hold down employment as a chef. He last got out of rehab in early 2003
just months before he would murder Robin Greene. He had a chef job lined up in Canora a small
city in northwestern Ontario close to the Manitoba border but it didn't take long before he relapsed
into his addiction and ended up in poverty. He scraped up what money he had left and used it to
return to Winnipeg where he'd grown up. He applied for financial assistance and when it was approved
he booked a room for a month at the Royal Albert Arms Hotel.
Finally Sydney said he was ready to talk about what happened that day. It was the moment Dan
Zupansky had been waiting for that would perhaps change everything. The police had already established
that Robin Greene arrived in Winnipeg the day before Canada Day to visit his sister. It's not
known what Robin did his first night in Winnipeg but Sydney told Dan that he spent his evening
doing crack cocaine and drinking alcohol. The next morning when he got up he went straight to
a bar called the Woodbine to continue. Now somehow Robin ended up in possession of Susan Sarandon's
four thousand dollar necklace. Some have speculated that he wanted on set and stole it but all that's
known is that the absence of the necklace was soon noticed by an assistant on set who reported it to
police. By that time Robin had made his way up to the Woodbine and according to Sydney tried to
sell him the necklace for fifteen dollars. Sydney thought Robin was attractive and asked him to
sit while he examined the necklace. While he said he didn't want to buy it Sydney suggested that
Robin stay and have a drink. Robin seemed to pick up what Sydney was putting down and put his hand
on Sydney's knee. They drank two pictures of beer and some shots of scotch, talked for a while and
then decided to go back to Sydney's hotel room. Over the next few hours Sydney said he drank more
alcohol, smoked crack and took oxycontin and the pair engaged in consensual sexual activity.
Sydney said he took provocative photos of Robin in different poses using three disposable cameras.
At one point Robin put the Susan Sarandon necklace around Sydney's neck although Sydney
said he had no idea it came from a movie set because Robin never said where he got it from.
At around two thirty in the afternoon Robin said he was tired and wanted to sleep.
Sydney said he was fine to sleep there and went down to the downstairs bar.
This is the point where Sydney got a beer from the bartender Diane and then went to sit with
the night bartender and his girlfriend. They apparently went outside to smoke some weed and
then Sydney finished his beer and headed back to his room. He says Robin was awake and so they
decided to go for a walk outside. According to Sydney they ended up in a local park that just
happened to be around the corner from the movie location shoot for Shall We Dance. He said he
and Robin had some adventures in the park before returning to the hotel at around five p.m. after
getting some ice and beers they returned upstairs to his room. Sydney wrote in his letters that when
he saw that Diane was still bartending he told her that Robin was his cousin because he didn't
want her to know his sexual orientation. When he got back with the ice he took Robin up to his room
and the rest is history. Sydney maintained that he was so drunk that he blacked out and couldn't
remember what happened.
Dan Zipanski was of course disappointed that Sydney was doubling down on his story but
as Sydney continued to write letters he started to drop hints that he did have more to say.
Dan had no idea what Sydney was going to tell him but he waited with baited breath. It was clear
to him that based on the evidence the crown was not going to be able to prosecute Sydney for
second degree murder and maybe if he continued to wait he would get some information that could
change things. After nine months Dan had managed to get a lot of information out of Sydney but he
knew there was more. Sydney had hinted at it several times. He explicitly promised to send
a chapter on how Robin ended up in the tub. At this point Dan told Sydney that if they wanted
to get the book out they needed to get going on finishing the story because the publisher was asking
and that's exactly what happened. Sydney started to reveal slowly that he did remember what he'd
done and Dan kept pressing him for more information and it came like a snowball. Sydney would write
more letters describing every phase of the murder of Robin Green and the aftermath in extensive
detail and it wasn't just graphic it was over the top gratuitous and explicit not to mention
utterly disrespectful to Robin. Sydney said he used his chef's knives to stab Robin to death
and the actual murder took less than three minutes ending at 6 20 p.m. just 90 minutes
after the two were last seen at the bar. According to Sydney Robin's last words were please don't
kill me. As soon as Sydney confirmed that Robin was dead he said he washed the blood from his
hands poured himself a drink and then sat by the open window smoking a cigarette while looking at
Robin's body on the bed. He filled the bathtub with warm water bathed with the body and then
fell asleep. When he woke up he said he got out of the bath and dried himself and then sharpened
his knife set with his sharpening stone and then he wrote about how he dealt with Robin's body
including the dismemberment disembowelment decapitation castration dissection and mutilation.
If those words alone weren't enough to provoke a severe reaction he went into shocking graphic
detail about how he violated the body in a variety of ways throughout including sexually
and experience that he described as intoxicating. He drew graphic pictures to accompany his letters
that illustrated what he did including a floor plan of the hotel room. It showed an outline of
Robin's dismembered body with arrows pointing to areas around the room where he committed various
parts of the crime described in explicit and crude detail. Sydney drew one crude picture that
he labelled the trophy which showed Robin's body posed accompanied by the tagline green as my trophy
my creation a work of art. Sydney told Dan that during the crime he wanted to experience what
Jeffrey Dahmer and Dennis Nilsen did during their crimes. Dahmer from the US and Nilsen from the UK
are two well-known serial killers and necrophiliacs who were known for selecting young males as their
victims and then committing atrocities on their remains afterwards for sexual gratification.
And even with the gruesome details Sydney wrote he said he was still keeping several
things he did to himself things he said he would never tell anyone because he wanted to respect
the dead but he also said he treated Robin's body like a dead animal or a side of beef and he made
crude jokes about the murder like I guess you could say I'm a cut above the rest. Sydney claimed
all kinds of other things at one point he told Dan that there was an additional person in the hotel
room called George someone that he and Robin had been drinking with that night. Dan said it was odd
that no one else had mentioned a third person in the room and told him to tell his lawyer about it
because that might be helpful information for his defense this claim about a third person never went
anywhere. As you'll remember Robin's remains had been drained of blood and his organs had been removed
Sydney wrote that some of the organs were tossed in a vacant lot in some tall grass
and the rest were tossed in a bodily waste bin near the health sciences centre
they would have been long gone by then and to this day the organs have never been found
but even with all this information all these details Sydney never once mentioned why he
did those things it was the one thing that Dan could never get him to answer and it just didn't
make sense. What was the motive for killing Robin Green? After sharing a cell with Sydney
Dan's old friend Don Abbott passed on some observations he told Dan Zipansky that Sydney
was meticulous sometimes to the point of seeming compulsive with his living space and his personal
self he was very emotional with a quick temper that seemed to come out of nowhere but had a lot
of depth behind it Abbott also spoke about Sydney's reputation while in prison describing him as being
very open about his sexuality and often offering sexual favours to other inmates
Sydney instructed Dan Zipansky to publish his letters in full but after the murder trial
and also told him that he wanted creative control of the book on the case
Sydney wanted his own photo to be on the front cover and brainstormed titles for it including
room 309 which was his hotel room he also suggested murder at 6 20 p.m and please don't kill me
which were of course Robin's last words in the end he settled on the title trophy kill the
shall we dance murder in reference to that Susan Sarandon movie
in a continued bid for fame and celebrity Sydney wanted to play up the Hollywood angle and was
convinced that he could get Richard Gere and Susan Sarandon to comment publicly on the stolen necklace
other ideas to drum up publicity for the book included getting Marilyn Manson to write a song
about him and he also proposed selling merchandise like t-shirts at the trial
but throughout all of this Dan couldn't help but feel as though he'd found himself involved in a
modern day murder mystery but it wasn't the classic who done it but rather why
Sydney had given him information and bits and pieces turning the whole thing into what seemed
to be an elaborate puzzle but the crime didn't seem to make sense despite all Sydney had told him
he thought there might be more to the story Dan decided to look at the evidence again
Sydney had mentioned that when he'd been interrogated at the police station he'd been
asked about other murder investigations in Vancouver and Edmonton which involved several
murdered and dismembered young males Sydney had denied it and claimed he made the police officer
extremely frustrated now Sydney had been moving between those locations and he'd also made it
clear that he was a big fan of serial killers and true crime he was a movie buff and he'd
just moved back to Winnipeg the town that was the home of so much of his childhood trauma
he'd ruined his career and was living in a low rent hotel while Dan pondered all these pieces
of information these puzzle pieces and how they might fit together the legislation making it
illegal for criminals to profit off their crimes had just been finalised
in March of 2005 about a year after Sydney and Dan first started communicating Dan called him to
deliver the news that the law had passed making it illegal for him to share profits from the book
sales Sydney immediately hung up on Dan and then sent him an angry letter saying that what Dan had
told him was very convenient he warned Dan not to make a fool of himself by publishing what he
called a book of lies because the story he'd told just wasn't true he still maintained that he
blacked out but said he'd gotten the inspiration for the gory details and graphic drawings in
textbooks about human anatomy and biology as well as books about serial killers by authors like Ann
Rule he said the information about necrophilia was completely made up quote if you put two and two
together I took excerpts from Dharma, Gacy, Nielsen and Warnos and put them together to give you a
story that was fiction that was the last letter Sydney ever wrote to Dan after their visits
letters and phone calls the relationship between admitted criminal and amateur writer was officially
over Dan Zupansky was reeling there were so many questions while Sydney was now claiming the details
he gave were lies the facts of the case were still glaringly obvious Robin Greene's remains
were horrifically interfered with and Sydney Tierhus was the one responsible and throughout all of
the letters Sydney had never mentioned a motive why did he do what he did Dan studied the serial
killers particularly Dennis Nielsen who Sydney seemed to put special emphasis on the UK killer had
murdered and dismembered at least 12 young men and boys in the 70s and 80s and was known for
observing rituals afterwards which included necrophilia and disposing of the organs by
flushing them down the toilet well Dan did see some similarities he found no evidence that Sydney
had directly used that material to craft his own story so regardless of lies that may have been
found in the small details there must have been at least some basic truth to what Sydney had told
him Dan was unsure of what to do so he said he spoke to two CBC journalists in Winnipeg to see
what they would have done he said they advised him to wait until after the preliminary hearing to
turn over the letters but he thought about it and if he did that it would have delayed the trial
itself and if he honored his agreement with Sydney and waited until after the trial then it would
have been grounds for a retrial which wasn't a good outcome either in the meantime Sydney Tierhus
had hired high-profile Winnipeg defense lawyer Greg Brodsky to represent him who you might remember
from episodes 22 and 23 of this podcast he represented Andrea Giesbricht the Winnipeg woman
who concealed the remains of six infants in a storage locker and he was also a key member of
Paul Bernardo's defense team Greg Brodsky is known as a very successful and experienced defense
lawyer and also a bit of a piece of work and Sydney soon told Dan something that shocked him
see Dan was under the impression that he was the only one that Sydney had told those stories to
those details that Dan believed proved he hadn't blanked out that day and knew exactly what he did
but Sydney told Dan that now his lawyer knew too as well as a psychologist Dan thought
surely if Sydney's lawyer had been told the same details that Dan had then it was the lawyer's duty
to turn that information over to the crown Dan consulted with some legal professionals one thought
that the lawyer definitely should have shared the information with the crown as it pertained to
physical evidence but at the same time he stressed that Dan should take it to the crown
immediately as it was crucial evidence the other lawyer a law professor stated his legal opinion
was that since the lawyer didn't see or possess the actual physical evidence he did not necessarily
have a legal obligation to disclose that information to the crown lawyer the professor
acknowledged that the issue was not without controversy though and agreed that Dan needed
to bring his evidence to the crown as soon as possible so Dan made a meeting with the police
and the crown lawyer and turned the letters in immediately after that he started looking into
Greg Brodsky and suspected that his team might use the legal defense of automatism where they
would argue that Sydney's actions were a set of brief unconscious behaviors for a limited time
where he was unaware of his actions basically this legal unconsciousness transformed Sydney into a
robot and if first or second degree murder requires intent the accused being on autopilot or legally
unconscious could be an obstacle getting way down into the legal weeds and picking things apart is
what Greg Brodsky is known for now at the time Dan Zupensky was hosting his weekly radio show
off the cuff at the University of Manitoba radio station and he invited Greg Brodsky for an interview
about being a criminal defense lawyer in Winnipeg Greg accepted the invitation now Dan did not want
to disclose his connection to Sydney Tierhus and Sydney hadn't told his lawyer about it either
the topic of Sydney Tierhus was not brought up at all in the interview Dan told Brodsky he wanted
to know about criminal defense strategies he'd used specifically automatism and also how he
determines the truthfulness of his client's story Dan wanted to know how far does Greg Brodsky go
in discerning whether his client is being untruthful concerning their guilt Brodsky replied quote
first of all a lawyer cannot put a defense forward that he knows to be false second he can't put
someone on the stand to tell a lie he can't put a perjured defense before the court after some
conversation about defense strategies Dan posed a question if Brodsky's client shared information
with him that he knew the prosecution did not have was he obliged to turn it over
Brodsky said he had no obligation to do anything quote I recognize that the issue to be tried
is whether the crown has sufficient evidence to satisfy a court beyond a reasonable doubt
of the guilt of my client and I am entitled to argue no they don't Brodsky went on to say that
the word innocent doesn't equate to he didn't do it the word innocent means there is insufficient
proof he added that it has nothing to do with what his client may or may not have told him
all that matters is challenging the quality of the crown's evidence
in light of this new information Dan said that he spoke with one of the law professors again
the professor told him that it's a lawyer's responsibility to determine the truthfulness
of any story their client tells and as long as the lawyer is not advancing a known lie
then what Brodsky said was essentially correct and then everyone waited for the trial
but there were delays according to Dan Zupansky while Sydney waited in jail for trial proceedings
to begin he had started studying his indigenous heritage before long his legal team had a challenge
to the court about jury selection his lawyer argued that indigenous people are unfairly
discriminated against during jury selection and because of that Sydney wouldn't get the jury of
his peers that he was entitled to which amounted to a violation of his charter rights statistics
were cited that showed the percentage of indigenous people incarcerated in Manitoba
was far higher than their percentage of the overall population in the province
and because of the rule that prospective jurors cannot have criminal records that made the likelihood
of getting that jury of his peers even more unlikely which was unfair lawyer Greg Brodsky
argued that the system's constraints meant that it was mainly the elderly and the unemployed who
made it to a jury and challenged the court to expand the criteria if successful this would have
had a massive impact on the Manitoba jury selection process but the complaint was dismissed the
decision stated that Sydney Tier Hughes was not entitled to request that of the court and he had
not proven a breach of any constitutional right and that's where we'll leave it for part one in
part two you'll hear about court testimony from both Dan Zupansky and Sydney Tier Hughes as the
jury decides whether Sydney had intent to commit murder that day among other things and at the
end of the episode I'll chat with Dan Zupansky about the theories he's developed about the case
part two will be in your inbox this time tomorrow but until then why not check out the newest season
of commons a documentary podcast that proves Canada is anything but boring I love commons so much
each season host Arshie Mann guides you through the country's dark underbelly bring you stories
about crime corruption and all manner of misdeeds commons brings you voices from every corner of
Canada from Toronto's most prolific bank robber to the whistleblower who took down Vancouver's
most infamous slum lords this season commons investigates Canada's current obsession real
estate from crime to corruption to segregation Canada's history of real estate is dark dark dark
real estate is by far our biggest industry and often the only way in which Canadians can build
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with land is also the source of so many of our problems listen to the new season of commons
real estate wherever you find your podcasts thank you to everyone who's told a friend
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the disclaimer and also to we talk of dreams who compose the theme song I'll be back soon
with another Canadian true crime story see you then
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