Canadian True Crime - Revisiting the Shell Lake Massacre
Episode Date: May 15, 2022Today in this special episode, we take a look back at one of the early Canadian True Crime episodes - the story of Saskatchewan’s worst mass murder. You'll hear a never-before-told story about why t...his episode was very different from the rest.Early one morning in 1967, 21-year-old Victor Hoffman was in the midst of a serious mental health crisis, a crisis that would have tragic consequences for an unsuspecting local family.Credits: Writer, researcher and narrator: Kristi LeeAudio production and original scoring: Erik KrosbyAdditional editing, mixing: Mike MigasMain resources and further reading:‘Schizophrenia, Mass Murder, and The Law’ by F.H. Kahan, Orthomolecular Psychiatry, Volume 2, Number 3, 1973, Pp. 127-146Marking 50 years since the Shell Lake murders, Canada's worst random mass killing by Bonnie Allan, CBC NewsRampage: Canadian Mass Murder and Spree Killing by Lee MellorCasefile: True Crime Podcast They Walk Among Us: UK True Crime They Walk Among America Felon True Crime podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, as mentioned yesterday there's going to be a delay in the start of the next series,
which is a four-part series of episodes to be released a week apart.
My sincere apologies for the delay, but rest assured we'll be making up for it soon with
a month that has double the amount of episodes. At the moment our target date for the series to
start is May 25th. But today we are revisiting episode 11 of Canadian True Crime, The Shall
Lake Massacre and the behind-the-scenes story about why this is one of my favorite early episodes
and what happened with the podcast around the same time that led to it sounding quite a bit
differently to any of the other episodes before it or after it. So first about the story.
This episode is of course about a massacre that shocked the province of Saskatchewan in 1967,
perpetrated by a 21-year-old man who was in an episode of acute religious psychosis.
This story starts by going through his background, the very real struggles his family had trying to
help him and his journey through mental health care in the 1960s as doctors tried various
controversial methods to treat a condition that they were still learning about. Unfortunately,
the patient fell through the cracks leading to a gut-wrenching tragedy. Now I wrote almost the
entire episode from a 1973 paper in the Journal of Orthomolecular Psychiatry. The paper is called
Schizophrenia, Mass Murder and the Law by F. H. Kehan. The paper is obviously a psychiatric case
study for medical professionals or was, but as an interested reader I found a plethora of details
that I wanted to rearrange into a podcast version of the story along with some other information
I sourced about the case along the way. Now here's where things get interesting.
As you guys know, I started this podcast as a personal creative project and it was mainly
inspired by three podcasts that I was binging at the time. They Walk Among Us, still going very,
very strong and in fact there's now a They Walk Among America, you should give that a go. The second
one was Fallen True Crime, Rest in Peace to That Podcast and Case File. This particular story
is about Case File, which in my mind is the pioneer of this style of podcasting in True Crime.
You know where a narrator tells you a scripted story. If somehow you haven't listened to Case
File yet, and you should since I've recommended so many of their episodes, it's produced in Australia
and the narrator is anonymous. Now Case File has a whole team of researchers and writers now,
but back when I started this podcast, there was just the anonymous host,
the audio producer and the first writer on the team. And in my first year of making my podcast,
2017, I became quite friendly with that writer and a priestess. There was a nice little community of
women in independent True Crime podcasting, which I very much appreciated. So I guess that she
mentioned me to the host of Case File and then we all started chatting about a possible future
partnership via email, along with the longtime Case File audio producer Mike Migus. It was such
an exciting time for me, someone who recorded in the closet and had no plans past teaching myself
how to podcast. So just to be talking with the podcast that inspired my own, after just a few
months was frankly beyond my wildest dreams. We decided to do a test and the deal was this.
I would get an episode ready as I usually do from my end. And then when it was finished,
I would send audio files of my narration and then the backing music over to Case File producer
Mike Migus, who would then run the files through the specific post production setting that he had
designed or filters, if that makes sense, that make up the Case File hosts distinctive sound.
The test was to see if we could get an episode that sounded a bit less like me and a bit more
like something you might expect from a Case File brand. As you would have all heard from the credits
of my podcast, We Talk of Dreams has been doing my audio production for a few years now. But
before that, I was lucky to have Eric Crosby as our audio producer. He's a Toronto composer, writer
and narrator who now hosts the podcast True. And you can still hear him voice the disclaimer in
every CTC episode. For this particular episode that you're about to hear, Eric actually composed
quite a bit of the music himself, including some particularly spooky music which hasn't been used
on any other episodes. So Eric and I worked on the episode and when our part was done,
I sent both tracks to Mike Migus from Case File to work his magic. Now the first time he ran them
through the post-production settings, I had to laugh because I sounded like the female version
of Casey McCase File. So after that, Mike played around with a few more settings and then we came
up with the final mix that you'll hear in a second. I still thought that it would take me a while to
get used to though. We agreed that the plan was to release the episode as usual and see if anyone
noticed. And if anyone had looked in the credits of the episode, they would have seen a special
producer credit in the show notes for Mike Migus. But other than that, no one knew just what went
into this special episode. So when it came to this potential partnership with Case File,
the test went well and only a couple of people noticed and they said that my voice sounded
more like a radio voice. The problem was the timing wasn't great for either of us. I feel
like it was probably just a bit too early. So we decided to put things on ice for the time being.
Anna Priestland, the head writer, ended up moving on to other opportunities. I focused on the podcast
market here in Canada and eventually Case File started the Case File Presents brand.
So this special episode where I sound less like me and more like the anonymous Case File host,
I've just listened to it again nearly five years later and I did have some nostalgia. I cringe every
time I hear my voice and that hasn't changed, especially when it comes to earlier episodes.
And while the episode does start off pretty slow and it sounds like I have a lisp for some strange
reason, I still think it was a compelling presentation. I love the music and it's something
that I'm pretty proud of as one of the earlier efforts on this podcast. In any event, it's time
to rest the old voice. Here's episode 11, the Shell Lake Massacre Revisited, the one that was
produced to sound like it could be under the Case File brand. Normally, I'd say this episode has
been remastered, but I don't think it needs it. It really was mastered by one of the best in the
business. And stay tuned for the end of the episode where I'll be telling you my thoughts and
reflections on how I covered it and what I might have done differently if I was covering it today.
Here we go. Thanks for listening.
This is Christy and welcome to Canadian True Crime, episode 11, the Shell Lake Massacre.
This podcast contains coarse language, adult themes and content of a violent and disturbing
nature. Listener discretion is advised.
This is a story from Saskatchewan. It's the tale of a young man's descent into madness
in the 1960s, leading to a collision with an unsuspecting family that will have tragic consequences.
The Hoffmans were a working class family based in a farming village 70 kilometres
north of Saskatoon, which is the largest city in the province of Saskatchewan.
Saskatchewan is in the western half of Canada and is part of the Canadian Prairie Provinces,
named because they're partially covered by prairie or grasslands. The province's economy
is based on agriculture, mining and energy. It's a farming province.
The Hoffmans were an ordinary farming family, devout Lutherans. Robert Hoffman was German
and his wife Stella was Ukrainian. As with most other farmers in the district,
the Hoffmans practised mixed farming, growing hay and raising cattle. With seven children,
they were a hardworking, locally respected family who only took occasional holidays
when the season would allow for it. As devout practising Lutherans, they kept the Sunday
they kept the Sunday as a holy day and attended church often.
Their fifth child was Victor Ernest Hoffman, born in 1946. Growing up, Victor seemed like all the
other children, meeting his milestones on time and seeming healthy, shy and able to amuse himself.
At about age six, he started school. He remained shy and a bit reclusive,
although he did have one close friend. It was around this time that Victor would later say
he first saw the devil. He recalled a pitch black creature about six feet tall, naked,
with a long tail. He would sometimes hear tapping sounds and would wake up in the middle of the
night to a drumming sound that seemed to go faster and faster. He said he felt like he was in the
middle of a fight between God and the devil. As Victor's paranoid delusions increased, he
obviously started having some trouble academically and had to repeat grade three. At about age 10,
he began having strange experiences and frequently felt urges to kill, daily.
When he met someone new, he would feel an immediate impulse to kill them.
Victor never once told his parents about what he was experiencing, and they didn't notice,
either because he hit it well or more likely because they were busy with the farm and six other
children. Victor began directing his impulses against animals, starting with a cat he caught
by accident in a magpie trap. He started off by torturing and killing any cat he could hunt,
and then progressed to dogs and other animals he could get his hands on.
He once said he killed several hundred squirrels.
One day, he unleashed on a young boy in a vicious and violent attack,
threatening the boy not to tell his parents what had happened. The boy didn't, and Victor got away
with it. Victor's father would later say, quote, he was just as smart as the rest of the boys. He
used to work here and fix bicycles for our neighbour's boys, and what they couldn't do, he could.
Victor's father went on to say that he was good at problem solving,
especially when it came to the issues that a farmer would encounter when planting a crop.
Victor was said to be a tremendous help around the farm. But mentally, things continued to slide
downhill, although Victor successfully continued to hide it from his large busy family. His psychosis
continued, seemingly fuelled by the strict religious practices of his family. He would later describe
having breakfast one day when he heard voices. It was the devil calling for him. When he went
outside, he saw a naked creature about six and a half feet tall, big and stocky with a pig-like
appearance. According to Victor, the creature was the devil, and he told Victor he could make him
very rich if he bowed before him. Victor didn't want to do this, but then decided to kneel on one
knee, thinking that he could get half the riches promised to him instead. Victor didn't get rich
and decided that it was because he refused to bow the way the devil he saw wanted him to.
This is one of about 20 times that Victor said he saw the devil, and soon after this,
he also started seeing angels. He said they looked like human beings, often women,
and that they would talk to him like the devil would. Victor's psychosis led him to believe he
was constantly in a fight between the devil and the angels. He would often grab weapons and believe
he was defending one off against the other. Victor had to repeat grade nine, and he had some more
trouble when he started not turning up to school. His parents weren't overly concerned. The principal
called them in for a meeting where they were asked why Victor wasn't attending, although their
recollection was that the principal said Victor had been no trouble until then. While he wasn't
causing trouble at school, it was different outside school hours. Victor was obsessed with guns and
stealing them. At age 15, he broke into a store in nearby town Leesk and stole firearms. He later
said that after the burglary, the tapping sound he heard would start back up again and would last
for weeks. He wasn't caught for this crime, but over a year later he broke into the same store
and stole more firearms. The tapping sounds in his head started up again, like Morse code from a
supernatural dimension. This time, his neighbours discovered it was Victor who had committed the
crime and turned him in. 17-year-old Victor spent 24 hours in jail and was handed a two-year
suspended sentence. As he approached his 20s, Victor's psychosis deepened. He started fainting
and having fits. The visits from the devil started increasing. The figure would hound him to sell
his soul, threatening that he would die a million times if he didn't. One time, Victor said he was
asked by God and his angels to slay the devil, and if he did, he would be taken to heaven.
He reported catching the devil, and although he couldn't specify how, he did say the creature
had such a foul odor that he had to release it straight away. Another time, he said he tried
to shoot the devil with a gun, but was unsuccessful. Desperate to have the nightmare over and go to
heaven as the angels promised, Victor recalled capturing the devil in a net, but reported being
betrayed by the angels who promised him entry to heaven. This whole scenario ended up with Victor
in a martial arts match with the devil, he recalled. It's not difficult to see that anyone
battling this kind of psychosis, so visceral in its presentation, is unlikely to meet a happy ending
before their world starts to spiral out of control. By now, Victor was 21 years old, and his family
had finally started to notice there was something very wrong with him. He would go from being quiet
and withdrawn to exploding in rage, emotional outbursts and senseless laughter, and then back
to being quiet again. On the morning of May 27th 1967, Victor suddenly walked into the hayfield
and started firing his rifle into the air. As he continued to shoot wildly, his mother Stella bravely
ran up to stop him, asking him to give her the gun. Victor said to her, I shot the devil.
Stella was able to commandeer the rifle off him and put it away.
Victor announced that he was feeling sick from a chemical used on the grain crop,
so he hopped in his car and drove off. While he was gone, his concerned family gathered up all the
guns in the house and hid them. Not long after that, Victor returned, looked for the guns,
and when he couldn't find them, demanded that his family give them up. His family stood strong.
Victor said, nobody will get hurt, and he said he wanted to speak to his local church pastor,
who was called immediately. Victor's mum, Stella Hoffman, was trying to listen in on his conversation
with the pastor, but wasn't able to make anything out. However, as the pastor was about to leave,
she heard Victor say, quote, I'd like to kill mum.
Robert Hoffman, Victor's father, said, quote, that poor guy. I guess he called for help. I guess he
didn't know which way to turn. Finally, Victor's family saw the full extent of what was happening
to him and made arrangements to have him committed to the Saskatchewan Hospital at North
Battlefield, a town about an hour's drive southwest of Leeske. A psychiatrist at the
mental health clinic there assessed Victor and found him to be a quote, schizoid,
in the state of acute schizophrenic reaction. The recommendation was that Victor needed to be hospitalised.
Likely relieved, Victor checked himself into hospital for an extended period.
According to Victor's hospital records, when he was admitted, he was sick both mentally and physically.
Alongside his psychosis, he was experiencing stomach cramps and burning sensations from
being exposed to the harsh farming chemicals. Basically, Victor was a mess. Hospital records
showed that Victor was fairly cooperative during examination, but appeared withdrawn,
apathetic, seclusive, vague and indifferent. When asked questions, he gave short responses
and needed prompting for more information. He eventually told the medical professionals
about his hallucinations, his interactions with the pig-faced devil creature and the angels.
He complained about not being able to get on with his brothers and sisters.
He had mentioned to them about seeing the devil, he said, but they laughed.
He said that he was now wondering whether he was male or female, because the devil had punished
him by replacing his brain with that of a girl called Denise. He felt that Denise was trying to
steal his body. The doctors tried to explain to Victor that his angel and devil stories were
merely hallucinations, but Victor argued that his encounters were so visceral and so real
that they couldn't have been anything but. His doctors noted that his daily life in the
mental hospital saw him preoccupied with sex and he, quote, masturbated daily.
And despite being fatigued and weak, Victor wasn't able to sleep. He was diagnosed with chronic
schizophrenia, resulting in uncontrolled symptoms and severe social handicaps.
The classic 1960s treatment plan he was given consisted of anti-psychotic medication, therapy
and a series of 12 electroshock therapy sessions. After the second ECT, Victor showed a marked
improvement. He seemed more pleasant and less withdrawn, but he was still delusional and
reportedly preoccupied with sex. The fifth ECT brought with it more improvements.
Victor became more cooperative and sociable and even admitted that the devil talk might have been
in his head. However, he still insisted that he had magic powers. After the ninth ECT,
not much change was noted, although his father said he was back to his usual self.
After the 12 ECT, the final one, Victor said he doubted the devil and angel stories,
but still believed that at times the devil was with him. And he said that if he was discharged,
he would still try to catch him and destroy him. But in the next few days, Victor changed his mind
again, this time saying that he decided all his ideas about the devil weren't real. He was now
more cooperative, pleasant and sociable, but still seemed a little withdrawn at times.
Although he said he was free now from the devil, he still thought about killing.
He thought of his brothers as being dead and of killing his parents, his sisters and his school
friends. He would later tell psychiatrists that he didn't hate any of them and that he had no
reason to kill them, but he just wanted to. Victor had now been hospitalized for a month,
and the hospital psychiatrist called his father in and told him that Victor was schizophrenic,
but not too bad. Victor's father didn't know the actual meaning of schizophrenia,
except that he assumed it meant a person had trouble controlling their mind. He asked the
psychiatrist how long it would take for Victor to become well again, quote,
maybe a year or two and he'll be as good as ever. Despite this statement, Victor was discharged to
go home with his father, who was armed with tranquilizers and a range of other medications
to administer. The date was July 26, 1967. Victor's concerned parents tried to keep track of his
medication. Victor was sleeping a lot more than normal. His parents were happy about this, thinking
the extra sleep would contribute to Victor being more rested up and able to better control his
mental illness. But Victor was not at all well. Inside, a storm was beginning to brew. As soon
as he got home from the hospital, he had a foreboding feeling that something was wrong,
something was going to happen to him. He was having a lot of visions,
prophetic visions. He saw things happening before they happened. He sometimes dreamed of killing
people, dreams during the night when he was sleeping and during the day when he was thinking.
Although he was glad to be home, Victor had a hard time getting used to being back on the farm.
He was needed for farm work, but he was weak. So, on August the 8th, almost two weeks after
coming home, Victor stopped taking his medication. He said he felt fine for the first two days,
but on the third day, the foreboding feeling grew stronger. Victor knew something was going
to happen. He was going to either end up in jail or back in the mental hospital.
His father said, quote, when he came out of hospital, he said he would sooner die than
go back because he couldn't stand the shock treatments. It was too much. At first, he said
the treatments didn't bother him because of the state he was in. But after he began to come out
of it, he began to feel the effects more. Every day after that, Victor had fantasies about killing
someone. He wanted to kill anyone, his brother maybe, his friend, their brother. He told another
friend about his thoughts and his friend said he didn't think Victor was the type. Victor was back
working on the farm and it would daydream about killing while he was driving the tractor.
On Saturday, August the 12th, Victor had a sudden thought that killing someone would
demonstrate his capabilities to the devil and that would bring him closer to the black beast.
But meanwhile, he was still unable to sleep. Two days later, on August the 14th, 1967,
the thoughts continued to intensify. He continued to work on the farm as usual and that night,
he lay down on the couch exhausted and actually managed to fall asleep. Later on,
his parents came to wake him and send him to his bed. He tried to get back to sleep,
but he couldn't. He tossed and turned all night. His mind started running away from him,
so he went to the garage. He saw a dog there and had the impulse to kill it, but didn't.
He tinkered around the garage for an hour and then started pacing up and down.
Suddenly, he felt a strange feeling on the right side of his head. He described it as
feeling like his whole body had been cut in half and something had left him.
Suddenly, a very powerful impulse to kill came upon him. He put gas in his car,
loaded up his rifle with ammunition and drove off into the night.
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40 miles drive northwest of Liske is the tiny community of Shell Lake, which in 1967 had about
250 residents. It boasted one hotel, a cafe and a pub. The main street was an unpaved dirt road.
Just outside this village lived the Peterson family, parents James Peterson, 47, and wife
Evelyn Peterson, 42. The Petersons were another ordinary churchgoing family and lived in a white
five-room farmhouse. They had nine children, ranging in age from one to 19. All still lived
at home except their oldest, Kathy, who had recently married and moved with her new husband
to a logging town in British Columbia. Another farming family, the Petersons had 480 acres
which they used for mixed use, grain crops and animal farming. James Peterson was a hardworking
farmer. Their second eldest child, 17-year-old daughter Jean, was a promising athlete. She was
hoping to go to a track and field camp in Dundern, a small village south of Saskatoon.
James decided that to pay for it, he would need to transfer 50 bushels of wheat from the bins to
his truck, which he would then drive to the grain elevator in Shell Lake to sell. He had a big day
of work ahead of him, so much that he asked a neighbour for help. So the morning of August
15, 1967, the family were starting to wake early to start their day.
At this exact same moment, Victor Hoffman was driving in his car through Country Saskatchewan,
his 22 rifle by his side. He didn't know where he was going. He just knew that he had to kill
something. A hawk swooped down and landed on a pole and Victor considered shooting it but kept
driving. He drove past farmhouse after farmhouse. His urge to kill grew with each house he passed.
With dawn now well underway, Victor pulled into the driveway of a white farmhouse. Victor immediately
thought he'd recognise the house. He'd seen it before in one of his visions.
It was 6am. Inside the house, James and Evelyn Peterson were sitting on the edge of their bed,
getting ready for the day ahead. Baby Larry was in his mother's arms, breastfeeding.
Suddenly, they heard the screeching of tyres coming to a stop on their driveway
and the slamming of a car door. Who is it? James yelled. Suddenly, the front door busted open
and 21 year old Victor Hoffman was standing in the doorway carrying his 22 calibre pump action
rifle. James Peterson came out of the bedroom, saw Victor and the gun and ran towards him trying
to protect his family from the danger that had entered their house. Victor fired, shooting
four bullets into James's stomach, sending him to the floor. Victor stepped into the farmhouse.
Suddenly, the once quiet house woke up to screams coming from all rooms. In one room,
six children huddled together, Mary aged 13, Pearl aged 9, Jean aged 17, William aged 5,
Phyllis aged 4 and Colin, 2. Mother Evelyn remained in her room holding Baby Larry tightly
as her husband James lay dying on the kitchen floor. Victor fired three more times into James.
He stepped over his lifeless body to where 11 year old Dorothy was. She slept on a cot in the
living room. Dorothy closed her eyes and screamed as Victor aimed his rifle at her head and pulled
the trigger. Victor then cocked his head, saw the bedroom with the five children huddled together
and marched over. One of the children screamed, don't shoot me, I don't want to die. Victor said
they didn't look like people to him, they looked like pigs and he'd already committed murder,
so why would he stop now? He ignored their pleas for mercy and started firing into their faces
at point blank range. The children dropped like flies, blood spattered the walls.
He didn't see four year old Phyllis who was hiding under the bedsheets. Meanwhile,
in the opposite bedroom, Evelyn Peterson was trying to escape out the window with Baby Larry.
She just made it out when Victor heard them. He moved at a rapid pace, slipping out the
window behind them. He fired four times at Evelyn, causing her to drop to the ground,
still holding her baby. Victor then turned and headed back into the house. He went back into
the bedroom where the children were to make sure he'd finished the job. He fired a few extra shots.
It was then that he saw four year old Phyllis cowering in between the lifeless bodies of two
of her sisters. He thought she had the face of an angel, so decided to spare her.
Storming back into the living room, Victor heard a baby cry. He stormed outside and came across
Baby Larry, still in the arms of his deceased mother. Victor stood there and thought to himself,
what will happen to that baby? He didn't want the baby to suffer, so although he said he hated
himself for it, he shot Larry. At this point, Victor felt deja vu. He'd seen all of this in a
dream before. He suddenly felt panicked and started looking for bullet casings from his rifle.
He shook up blankets looking for them. He picked up 17 of them and put them in his right pocket.
He then went through all of the wallets he could find, taking a total of $7. He got in his car
and drove the 40 minutes back to his home. What he left behind in that farmhouse was the
Saskatchewan's worst mass murder and remains so to this day. On the drive home, Victor felt sick.
He thought he might have to shoot himself, but he said he didn't know where to do it
so that he would die quickly. He arrived home at about 7.30am. His parents were both up and his
father asked him where he'd been. Both parents chastised him for getting up so early and driving
around. Victor felt confused. At the time of the shootings, he felt that what he was doing was right,
but now he felt terrible and knew he was going to be in trouble. He didn't want to go to jail.
His impulse to kill had been satiated and he would later say that he somehow knew that he could never
kill again. Meanwhile, a neighbour of the Peterson family was on his way to the White Farmhouse.
Will Drew Lang had agreed to help James Peterson process the wheat he was going to sell to pay
for his daughter Jean's athletic camp. Will Drew arrived at the Peterson farm and got to work while
he waited for James to come out. At 9am, there was still no sign of James, which was odd since
Will Drew was there to assist him after all. So Will Drew went over to the house to see if anyone
was there. As he approached it, he noticed the usual noisy bustle of the house was gone, replaced by
an eerie quiet feeling. The family dog came out to see Will Drew, but he seemed subdued and not
his friendly self. When the neighbour got to the front door, he saw the lifeless body of James
Peterson just inside the entrance. He was covered only by shorts and a lot of blood. That was enough
for Will Drew. Because the farmhouse didn't have a phone, he ran to the Peterson station wagon and
floored it to the village of Shell Lake, where he phoned the RCMP. Corporal Barry Richards,
alone, was first on the scene. What he saw was a scene of horror. First, James's bullet-ridden
remains, and then he saw 11-year-old Dorothy, who lay dead on her cot in the living room.
Moving into the bedroom, he saw 5-year-old William, 13-year-old Mary and 2-year-old Colin,
dead on a mattress. They'd been shot. He also saw 17-year-old Jean and 9-year-old Pearl, also dead.
But wedged between them was 4-year-old Phyllis, who remained physically unharmed but was suffering
from shock. She had her head buried in the bed. The RCMP officer lifted the silent 4-year-old up
and drove her to a neighbour's farmhouse for safety. After that, he drove to Shell Lake to
request backup and then went back to the Peterson home. This time, he was joined by a doctor from a
nearby medical clinic. At the back of the house, they saw the bodies of Evelyn Peterson and baby
Larry under an open window. Each of the victims had powder burns on their flesh that indicated
they'd been shot at close range. RCMP backup arrived and commenced the processing of the crime scene.
Nine people lay dead in different locations in the house and they had no idea who did it or why.
This would take some time to figure out.
They did find several clues. Several distinctive bloody footprints were found on the linoleum floor.
There was a diamond on the sole and a V-shape on the heel. They also found several used 22-caliber
bullet casings. In his haste to leave, Victor had neglected to pick them all up.
In the meantime, as news spread around the community of Shell Lake and surrounds,
there was widespread panic. An unknown killer was on the loose. A killer that shot an entire
family, including a baby. Everyone was on edge with fear that their family might be next.
That night, concerned citizens slept with their lights on and weapons at the ready,
should the deadly killer choose their house next. The media would later name that night as
The Night of Fear. Obviously, the RCMP felt enormous pressure to find this killer,
so they didn't waste any time in launching into the investigation. With the aid of 75
police dogs, they thoroughly searched the area surrounding the Peterson Farmhouse,
put up roadblocks and encouraged the locals to report anything they saw as suspicious.
The sole prints found at the scene were sent for forensic processing in Regina,
the capital city of Saskatchewan. The bullet casings were also analyzed and found to be
belonging to one of three potential gun models. The community couldn't believe that a single person
could have executed the massacre without any of the family escaping and speculated that there
must have been more than one gunman. But local investigators Brian Sawyer and staff sergeant
Ronald Sondergaard didn't agree. They weren't professional profilers, but they noticed that
the Petersons were an ordinary farm family with no real enemies to speak of. There appeared to
be no motive for the massacre. There was nothing there to suggest that either robbery or sexual
assault were motives. The only conclusion they could come to was that the murderer must have been a
local man with a history of mental illness. On August the 17th, two days after the massacre,
a farmer walked into the Shelbrook RCMP saying, quote,
my neighbor's son just got out of the mental hospital and he likes guns and is a good hunter.
He gave a name, Victor Ernest Hoffman. The RCMP immediately drove out to the Hoffman residence
at least to interview Victor. As they were walking up to the front door of the house,
they noticed the exact same pair of boots worn by the killer on the stoop.
They were seized for evidence. They asked Robert Hoffman, Victor's father,
if the family had a .22 caliber rifle, which he confirmed. The officers retrieved the gun and
sent it to forensics to match with the bullet casings they'd found. Within 24 hours, they got
the news that Victor Hoffman was the Shell Lake murderer. They also sent the boots,
which were determined to have human blood on them. The RCMP searched the grounds of the Hoffman
property and found two empty wallets, both belonging to the Peterson family. Victor Hoffman was
arrested on August the 19th, four days after the massacre, while he was mowing his field.
He was taken to the station for interrogation. It didn't take much for him to crack,
and after 15 minutes, he confessed to all of the murders.
He expressed remorse for not burning down the house, saying that then maybe the police wouldn't
have found the bullet casings. The police interviewer asked him if he'd ever wanted to do anything
like this before. Victor replied, quote, no, just those few minutes there, it just popped into my
mind, just like that. Do you think I could get rid of it? No, sir, I just went and done it anyway.
The police asked him if there was anything else he wanted to say, quote,
just that I know I'm sick in the head, but I can never kill again. I know that.
The same day Victor was arrested, the funeral was held for the nine murdered members of the
Peterson family. 1500 people from the Shell Lake area and neighboring communities gathered at God's
Acre Cemetery in Shell Lake to watch as they were lowered into a mass grave.
Two family members had survived, 19-year-old Kathy, who lived in British Columbia with her husband,
and of course, four-year-old Phyllis, who survived the massacre. After Phyllis was orphaned, Kathy and
her husband, Lee, picked Phyllis up from Shell Lake and brought her back to BC to raise her as
their own. For the many residents of Shell Lake, while the sadness of losing the entire Peterson
family this way lingered, they were content to know that the killer had been apprehended,
they could go back to their normal lives. But the story was not over for the professionals working
the case. On August 21, 1967, two weeks after the massacre, Victor Ernest Hoffman was charged with
the capital slaying of James Peterson. He was sent to the University Psychiatric Hospital in
Saskatoon to be assessed, with the end goal of determining whether or not he was fit to stand
trial. For two days, Victor was interviewed by Dr. Donald MacKerisher. In one conversation,
he blamed James Peterson, saying that if his reaction had been different when he first
saw Victor into the house, then so would have the outcome. Quote,
If he had talked quiet and told me I was wrong, it would have been alright. He could have helped
me and I wouldn't have killed him, but he tried to stop me. Victor said he was a little scared
when he shot James, but he wasn't sorry. He then blamed the mental hospital that discharged him
three weeks before the massacre. Quote, If I had someone to talk to, I wouldn't have committed
murder. I knew when I left that I would commit murder, I feel guilty. I am scared that I'll
spend the rest of my life in prison. I will never see the outside world again. I didn't know what
I was doing, I didn't know how I started to do it. My mind was blank, it was kill, kill, kill.
Victor then blamed the devil, saying the creature of his visions had tricked him,
but he couldn't offer a rational explanation as to why he had been specifically targeted.
He said he wished to die now.
The end result of the analysis? Victor was diagnosed as schizophrenic,
but was deemed to stand trial. He was transferred back to the Prince Albert Jail.
The court appointed GE Noble to act as defense counsel for Victor Hoffman. With 18 years practice
experience under his belt, Mr Noble went about formulating a strategy. Because he didn't know
much about psychiatry, he conducted a lot of research, including asking for all of Victor's
medical records. It soon became obvious to him that Victor was seriously mentally ill at the
time of the shooting, but he decided his main problem in formulating a defense would be to try
and overcome what he thought to be the danger, which was the jury saying they were fed up with
people being released from hospital and killing people and convicting just on that basis.
He had to make them see that there was more to the story.
In 1967, the foundation of this attitude was years of conflicting and unproven theories that
thoroughly confused the public about what exactly schizophrenia is. It was frequently
thought to be split personality or an illness of weak people who are unable to control their own
minds. The public and professionals alike viewed it as an incurable condition. Mr Noble had many
questions that he needed to address in this strategy. The word wrong was subject to interpretation.
Does it mean legally or morally wrong? Was Victor mentally ill and was it possible to say
how long he had been mentally ill for? Was he insane at the time of the commission of the
offense? Was he capable of appreciating the nature and quality of his act and knowing what
he did was wrong? And was he at the time of the examination fit to stand trial?
The lawyer decided that there was no point in having Victor examined by the same hospital
psychiatrist who discharged him three weeks before the massacre. If they admitted they made a mistake
in letting him out so early, then they were in effect saying they were responsible for what
had happened to the Peterson family. So he set about finding other mental health professionals
who had experience with schizophrenia and he managed to find some highly qualified professionals
in Saskatoon. One of them, Dr Abram Hoffa, was on the forefront of schizophrenia research.
He was the co-inventor of the HOD test or Hoffa-Osman diagnostic test, which was a series of
questions used to differentiate patients with schizophrenia. The patients are asked to answer
questions about their perception of their environment. Most patients without mental illness score
less than 20 on the HOD test and the average score for a patient with schizophrenia is around 65.
Victor's medical records indicated he was a 65 when he was released from the mental hospital
three weeks before the massacre, meaning he was definitely mentally unwell. And when Dr Hoffa
tested him in preparation for the trial, he had a score of 99. During interviews, Victor told Dr
Hoffa that he didn't feel guilty because he was only doing what the devil told him to do. He also
said he was certain that God wasn't angry with him. He actually felt more remorse for the gun
burglaries he had committed in his teens than the obliteration of the entire Peterson family at his
own hand. He added he hadn't seen the devil recently, but he said he expected him to visit
the following February and something would happen to him then. In his final report, Dr Hoffa reported
that in his experience he had quote, not run across any patient that had quite as many different
perceptual changes as Victor had demonstrated. He was diagnosed as suffering from a quote,
very serious form of paranoid schizophrenia over a minimum of 10 years.
The conclusion from Dr Hoffa and the other psychiatrists who examined Victor
was that from a legal and psychiatric standpoint, Victor was not sane at the time of the Shell Lake
massacre. The judge, however, decided that there was sufficient evidence to put Victor on trial,
so scheduled it for the following January. What kind of punishment was Victor facing?
As of December 1966, the December before the massacre, capital punishment in Canada was strictly
reserved for those who had murdered police officers or prison guards on duty. So Victor's charges were
changed to two counts of non-capital murder for the deaths of James and Evelyn Peterson.
The trial of Victor Hoffman opened on January the 8th, 1968, in the court of Queen's Bench in
North Battlefield, presided over by Justice M. A. MacPherson. The 60-year-old courthouse was packed,
and despite a snowstorm and temperature of minus 10 Celsius, more people waited outside.
The prosecution presented its evidence, which included Victor's taped confession where he
described the murders in vivid detail. The bloodstained boots were presented, footprints
and what appeared to be blood, vials containing lead bullets taken from the bodies of the slain
family, a gun cleaner, and 14 used 22 bullet casings found during the processing of the crime scene.
It was clear to all that Victor had pulled a trigger, so the defense's strategy of course
focused on his sanity or lack thereof. Dr. Hoffman was called to the witness stand to speak
in what Victor's lawyer dubbed a little seminar on this illness. His goal was to get the jury to
understand the headspace of a person with paranoid schizophrenia. Dr. Hoffman described in layman's
terms the severe sensory and cognitive effects that a person with schizophrenia would experience.
He explained that Victor was, quote, doing what he had to do in terms of those delusions he was
suffering at the time. Though Hoffman might have had a legal awareness of his acts,
he was working for a higher injunction which set him above and apart from the ordinary man.
One of the other consulting psychiatrists, Dr. Donald McKerritcher, agreed that Victor did not
fully appreciate what he was doing, quote, he would not have it in his mind to know it was
wrong to do what he was doing at precisely the time he was doing it. The thought of wrongness
just would not have crossed his mind. In closing, Mr. Noble said the crown had presented a good
case to prove that Victor Hoffman shot the Peterson family.
But a search for a motive would be a search in vain. Crown prosecutor, S. Kajawa,
argued that although Victor had been a mental patient until three weeks before the murder,
he was legally sane at the time of the crime. His argument hinged on whether Victor knew what he
was doing was wrong, saying he must have known what he was doing since he was able to describe it
in vivid detail later on. Before the jury deliberated, Justice McPherson told them that the defence of
insanity must be applied only to Victor's state of mind when the acts were committed and that the
criminal code said that no person can be convicted of an offence committed when insane. The jury
deliberated for three and a half hours and then reported that they found Victor was guilty.
Victor Hoffman not guilty by reason of insanity for the non-capital murder of James and Evelyn
Peterson. Victor showed no emotion as he was told he would immediately be committed to a facility
in the city of Prince Albert. Some time after that, he was transferred to Penetanguasheen
Mental Health Centre in Simcoe County, Ontario, where he would stay for over 30 years.
In 1992, journalist Peter Tadman wrote a book about the murders and interviewed Victor Hoffman
a few times for it. Victor said that he continued to be haunted by his nemesis, the devil. Despite
this, in 2001, he was granted supervised access to nearby towns, a decision that was controversial
because the hospital was only required to tell the local police of his release.
Victor Ernest Hoffman, the perpetrator of Saskatchewan's worst mass murder, died of cancer on May the 21st,
2004, at age 56. He remained hospitalised from his capture until his death.
So what happened to Little Phyllis, the sole survivor of the massacre who ended up living
with her sister, Kathy, in BC? Journalist Peter Tadman also interviewed her in the 90s
and asked her about the time after the killings. Phyllis said that the months afterward was
somewhat of an empty time. She missed her family terribly. Her brothers and sisters were her
closest playmates. She also said she had no memory of what really happened.
There is very little that I remember of that night. I remember there being policemen around
and that kind of thing, but as a child, I didn't realise what was happening.
Later on, her sister, Kathy, would say that although they didn't hide the facts about what
had happened, Phyllis didn't want to talk about it. I think she had a bit of a memory of it,
but there was never a time when we actually sat her down and told her.
It was always something she knew had happened. It was always part of her life growing up.
Kathy went on to say that Phyllis kept mostly to herself back then and took things day to day.
Kathy, her husband Lee and Phyllis ended up moving back to Shell Lake so they could be
closer to friends and other relatives. And over the years, the couple had four more children.
Phyllis ended up growing up in a large, bustling family with more siblings to play with.
Phyllis told the journalists that her childhood was happy and she was often spoiled by the community
because they felt sorry for her. They would give her expensive gifts, which she said made
her feel guilty, so she would try and overcompensate her siblings for it because she was being spoiled
and they weren't. Her older sister, Kathy, said that she had no memory of what had happened.
Kathy would also say that despite the benefits of moving back to Shell Lake to be closer to
friends and family, it had a difficult aspect too. Quote, rather than being left to get on with
our lives, people always reminded us of it. But she said that it actually made both women
stronger as adults. Quote, it makes you appreciate what you still have a lot more. It makes you
take advantage of every chance you get to let your family know you care about them.
After Victor Hoffman's death of cancer, Phyllis spoke with the Toronto Star saying she welcomed
the news. She stressed that she had stopped letting Victor have power over her years ago.
Quote, I had to make a choice. Was I going to live my life or let Victor win? He took my
family's lives. He's not going to take mine. Phyllis and Kathy still live in Shell Lake with
their families. Phyllis, now 54, is married with a son. August the 15th, 2017, just two weeks from
the release date of this episode, will be the 50th anniversary of the Shell Lake massacre.
The mass grave of the Peterson family is still there in the cemetery and is often visited by
strangers wishing to pay their respects. The victims were James aged 47, Evelyn aged 42,
Jean aged 17, Mary aged 13, Dorothy aged 11, Pearl aged 9, William aged 5, Colin aged 2,
and Baby Larry aged 1. Canada handles patients with paranoid schizophrenia
much differently these days. A fairly recent comparison case is the 2008 murder of Tim McClain
on a greyhound bus in the province of Manitoba. Vincent Lee, a patient with paranoid schizophrenia,
who, like Victor Hoffman, was experiencing escalating religious psychosis, randomly attacked
his sleeping victim on a bus with a knife. Vincent Lee said he heard God's voice telling him that
Tim McClain was a force of evil and was about to execute him. It was a grisly, shocking murder
that left an innocent man dead and dismembered on a greyhound bus with lasting psychological
effects on those who witnessed and responded to the attack. Vincent Lee was found not criminally
responsible for the killing and was remanded to a mental health centre, but this is where the
similarities to Victor Hoffman end. Canada's focus on rehabilitation saw the man being slowly given
more and more privileges. In 2015 he was granted unsupervised day passes to visit the city of
Winnipeg as long as he was carrying a working cell phone. In 2016 he changed his name and this
past February 2017, nine years after the murder, he was completely discharged from the system.
This controversial decision came with no legal obligations or restrictions placed on his being
able to live independently in the community. If you wanted further reading, I recommend a book
called Rampage Canadian Mass Murder and Spree Killing by Lee Mallor. This book tells 25 stories
of Canada's most lethal mass and spree killers detailing their grisly crimes, delving into their
twisted psyches and dissecting their motivations to answer the question of why. You now know one of
these stories, so there are 24 more for you to explore. It's called Rampage and you can buy it
wherever books are sold. I've also included a link in the show notes.
And exciting news, I've just started up a discussion group on Facebook.
Come and join me and save me from the tumbleweeds and the sound of crickets.
We can discuss what's going on in the world of Canadian true crime,
other podcasts you're listening to and more. To find me on social media, just search for Canadian
true crime. Okay, I just have to say, this comment about the Facebook group made me laugh so much.
Spoiler alert, the Facebook group turned into a giant trash fire and I turned it over to some
very capable moderators. It's not affiliated with the podcast anymore. It's called Canadian Crime
Discussion Group now. It was kind of funny to see how I structured the story and it was so evident
that I didn't spend days laboring over words and sentences like I do now. There's also quite a bit
of outdated language that came from the journal paper, like referring to someone as a schizophrenic
or a schizoid. It's outdated language that I would have explained if I were covering it today.
It's good enough though, especially considering that I was fairly naive and inexperienced then.
The podcast was my baby. I did it for myself and I thought if people wanted to listen then that was
great. But once I unexpectedly started to gain an audience, I realized that with this audience
came a great responsibility. So I decided to start educating myself on many of the issues that came
up as I wrote each episode and sharing what I'd learned with you as part of it. And I'm not
saying that I always get it right. I certainly don't. But I do give it my best and I'm always
aiming to improve. The thing that I struggle with now is that because my standards have skyrocketed,
the time that it takes to research, write and produce the episodes is blown out. And so now
my struggle is to try and maintain a balance that's sustainable in the long term. It's always a work
in progress. Well, that's it for revisiting the Shell Lake Massacre. If you're still listening,
thanks for your patience and I'll see you very soon with the next series.
you