Casefile True Crime - 332: Case 285: Louise Ellis
Episode Date: May 25, 2024*** Content warnings: Domestic violence *** When freelance writer Louise Ellis disappeared after leaving her Ottawa home on April 22 1995, the person leading the search for her was her devoted partne...r, Brett Morgan. But Brett’s criminal background made investigators suspicious and he found himself feeling more like a suspect than a victim. When he was approached by an aspiring private investigator named Marie Parent, the case suddenly took a very different turn… --- Narration – Anonymous Host Research & writing – Erin Munro Creative direction – Milly Raso Production and music – Mike Migas Music – Andrew D.B. Joslyn Sign up for Casefile Premium: Apple Premium Spotify Premium Patreon For all credits and sources, please visit casefilepodcast.com/case-285-louise-ellis
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At approximately 11.45pm on Monday April 24 1995, Constable Robert Cross was manning the
Public Information Desk at the Ottawa Carlton Regional Police Headquarters when
he saw a man approaching. The man was in his mid-40s with balding grey hair and a bushy mustache.
When the man reached Constable Cross's desk, he informed the officer that he wished to report a
missing person. The man's name was Brett Morgan. He was worried about his partner, 46-year-old Louise Ellis.
Brett had last seen Louise more than 48 hours earlier when she'd left to visit an old friend
at around 2pm on Saturday, April 22. The friend lived in a cottage near Wakefield in the Gatineau Hills, a forested area in the neighbouring province of Quebec. It was only a 30 minute or so drive
from Ottawa until Louise planned to stay there one or two nights. Brett Morgan said she had
been cheerful and excited about her weekend retreat. But the following day, Brett received a phone call from Louise's friend saying that she'd
never arrived. Brett wasn't overly concerned, as Louise had mentioned she might visit another
friend in the area as well and spend a night with her. Perhaps she had decided to go there first.
But when there was no sign of Louise by Monday evening, Brett began to raise the alarm.
He called a number of Louise's friends, asking if anyone had seen her. Nobody had.
One person Brett called was Brenda Misson, the second friend Louise had planned to visit while
away. Brenda hadn't seen Louise, but Brett's call jogged a memory.
Earlier that day, Brenda had been driving along a rural stretch near her home in Wakefield, Quebec,
when she saw a yellow and white Suzuki Sidekick Jeep parked on the shoulder of the road.
It was the same make and model as Louise's car. Brenda made a mental note to check whether it
belonged to her friend later on. She had forgotten to do so until Brett's call reminded her.
Brett rushed to meet Brenda and they inspected the car together.
The license plates confirmed it was Louise's car. Its doors were locked. Inside, in the back of the vehicle,
was a wrapped gift Louise had been taking for her friend's daughter, as well as Louise's overnight
bag. Her handbag lay on the front passenger seat. Her wallet was inside, along with some cash and all her bank cards. There was no sign of Louise.
Brett appeared calm as he relayed his story to Constable Robert Cross,
but the officer could hear the worry and concern in his voice. The pair spoke for roughly 30 minutes
while Constable Cross filled out the missing persons report with all the details Brett provided.
the missing persons report with all the details Brett provided. During their conversation, Brett suddenly said something unexpected. He informed the constable that he had previously been convicted
of killing a woman. Constable Robert Cross was surprised and disturbed by this revelation.
Brett Morgan came across as a loving and caring spouse who was genuinely concerned about his
missing partner's welfare, so his admission that he had previously served time for killing
another woman was shocking.
Brett explained that his previous conviction was a long time ago. 17 years earlier, when he was in his late 20s, he had gotten mixed up in criminal activity,
including break and enters and theft.
One night during this period, Brett had been consuming drugs and alcohol with his then-girlfriend.
At around 2.30 in the morning, he got into an argument with a woman named Gwen Telford,
who'd lived in shared accommodation with them. Gwen was 21 and an accomplice to Brett's crimes.
Brett had strangled Gwen and was subsequently convicted of manslaughter.
He served 10 years, but following his release he was convicted of new charges relating to
fraud, theft, forgery, and escape in custody.
Constable Cross found Brett to be remarkably upfront about his criminal past, especially
given the nature of his visit.
His frank admission and willingness to honestly cooperate was totally at odds with what the
officer would have expected for an individual
with his history and a newly missing partner. Constable Cross informed Brett that if Louise
had been harmed in some way, Brett's record meant that he would naturally be a suspect.
Brett replied that he understood that and expected that. But he was adamant that he hadn't hurt Louise. She was
someone he described as his soulmate and the person who had helped turn his life around.
They had met three years earlier in March 1992 while Brett was serving his second sentence.
Louise was attending a Supreme Court hearing into the wrongful conviction
of a man for murder. She was a freelance writer and hoped to write a book about the case.
As Louise sat in the public gallery, Brett Morgan was brought in shackled to testify as a witness.
A former cellmate of his had admitted to being the true perpetrator of the crime,
and Brett had come forward to testify. Louise, who was a fierce justice advocate,
was struck by Brett's courage. His actions wouldn't make him popular with his fellow inmates.
After Brett finished testifying, he was escorted back out of the courtroom.
Louise followed him to the elevator where he was flanked by two guards.
She tapped one of the guards on his elbow and said,
I'd like to have a word with Brett. She then made eye contact with Brett and told him,
I think what you did was really brave. Brett smiled and thanked her.
Louise subsequently wrote a letter to Brett and they struck up a friendship,
then a romantic relationship while he served out his sentence. They communicated via letters,
phone calls and eventually had in-person visits.
In 1994, Louise helped Brett with his parole application, hiring lawyers for him and staying
in constant contact via the telephone.
Her efforts paid off, and in May 1994, Brett Morgan left prison on parole.
Louise was there to pick him up in her yellow Suzuki sidekick
and she bought him an ice cream cake to celebrate on the way home.
Brett moved in with her and she had helped him establish a home renovation business.
They had been a happy couple who were often observed by a neighbour sitting on the front porch together holding hands.
Although Constable Cross saw nothing in Brett Morgan's demeanour that made him suspicious, Brett's background meant he couldn't be treated like an ordinary citizen.
Constable Cross asked Brett if he would accompany him to the criminal investigation department to speak with detectives. Brad agreed.
He repeated his story to two detectives, who listened attentively and took notes. They asked
Brett to come back to the station the following day with photographs of Louise for a missing
persons poster. Brett Morgan returned to the police station the following morning, accompanied by a friend of his and Louise.
Detectives wanted to interview Brett again.
Although he seemed anxious to get on with searching for his partner, Brett obliged.
After the 90 minute interview concluded, Brett told his friends that the detectives had put quite a bit of heat on him during the interrogation,
wanting to know all the details of his recent movements. Brett didn't seem happy about this
development, but told his friend he would do whatever he had to if it helped them find Louise.
As it stood, there was no evidence that a crime had been committed. All of the detectives who
spoke to Brett Morgan found him to be a calm, polite and cooperative witness, as well as a
clearly worried spouse. Brett's parole officer reported to detectives that Brett was doing well
on parole and there seemed to be no problems between him and Louise. Detectives asked Brad if they could see Louise's
will and he obligingly showed it to them. It turned out that he was Louise's sole beneficiary,
but by law he would receive nothing for seven years unless she was confirmed to be deceased.
Brad also handed over Louise's financial records and her private diaries.
Brett also handed over Louise's financial records and her private diaries.
The following day of Wednesday April 26, a search party assembled outside a restaurant in the town of Wakefield, Quebec, close to where Louise's car had been found.
As well as Ottawa detectives and local police officers from Quebec,
Brett Morgan and members of Louise's family were
present. The group spanned out from the area of River Road where Louise's car was parked.
There was nothing wrong with the vehicle that might have prompted Louise to abandon it there,
and its tank was full of petrol. A couple who lived nearby told police they'd noticed the Jeep parked there
since Saturday April 22, the day Louise had left for her trip. It was towed to a nearby garage where
an officer would later dust it for prints. The area surrounding River Road was densely wooded,
and spring rain had made it muddy.
Police officers and Louise's loved ones tramped through the cold, scouring the bushes and trees
for any trace of Louise. They looked through piles of lumber and felled trees as well as a
nearby ridge that was dotted with boulders and a derelict car. They found nothing.
Over the following days, divers would search the nearby Gatineau River, but also came up empty-handed.
While the police searches were dialled down, Brett Morgan kept looking. He followed up leads and
printed his own posters featuring a photo of Louise and requests for any witnesses to come forward.
Brett also gave interviews with the press. He was frank about his past, telling the Ottawa citizen,
quote, I was convicted of manslaughter and it involved a woman. I understand the implications
of that. I have to be a suspect. It's obvious." But he was adamant that he would never harm the
woman who had given him a life free from crime. He felt lost now he was alone without her. On Saturday April 29, one week after Louise had gone missing,
Brett spent the day standing at the site where Louise's Suzuki sidekick was found,
with a stack of his homemade posters. He flagged down passing cars and told their occupants about
his missing spouse in an effort to raise awareness and find potential leads. I can't rely on the police, he said. It's hard living at home, not knowing where she is.
Police told the media that there was no evidence of any foul play, with one Ottawa detective
stating, people go missing every day. She may have just gotten tired of this
world and walked away." During conversations with Brett Morgan, one detective mentioned another
case he'd worked on in which a woman had vanished without a trace. His colleagues had immediately
decided her husband had murdered her, but then the woman was found
alive and well, living in another city.
It turned out she'd just wanted to get away.
The detective said he didn't want to jump to the same conclusion again.
Investigators in Quebec were equally reluctant, telling journalists it wasn't their investigation
as there was nothing to indicate
Louise was on their side of the border, despite her car being left there. Despite police agencies
downplaying the situation, the rumour mill went into overdrive. It was revealed that Louise Ellis
had paid for a small ad to run in the wanted section of a Wakefield newspaper,
which read,
''Responsible nature lover seeks comfortable, quiet cottage.''
Friends confirmed that Louise had spoken about wanting to lease a vacation cottage for the
upcoming summer.
It was speculated that perhaps she had been intending to visit rental properties while
in the area.
Others wondered if perhaps Louise had disappeared into the wilderness with the intention of
taking her own life.
Rumours also spread that a stranger might have ambushed and abducted her, leaving her
car behind on the side of the road.
Brett Morgan dismissed the suicide theories and kept searching, telling the media,
she's my sweetheart, she wouldn't give up on me, and I'm not going to give up on her.
Brat rejected the idea that Louise had decided to abandon their life together without a word.
He suspected foul play, but he wasn't pointing the finger at a
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to continue to deliver quality content. When Louise Ellis first met Brett Morgan,
she was already in a relationship. She had met her former
partner John May Zornweve four years earlier at a jazz festival. The pair moved in together several
months after meeting, but it was a volatile on and off again relationship. When Louise saw Brett
Morgan in the courtroom and was immediately transfixed by him, it marked the end of her relationship with John Maysornweve.
He left Louise after she started speaking with Brett regularly.
John took the breakup badly.
He refused to speak to Louise and the pair lost contact for over a year.
Then they started talking again in the summer of 1994, not long after Brett Morgan
was released from prison and moved in with Louise. There was no longer a romantic element to Louise
and John's relationship, but they were able to become friends. John had a daughter from
a previous relationship and Louise was very fond of her.
On the weekend that Louise went missing, John was the friend who she'd been planning to stay with in the Gatineau Hills. It was his daughter's 12th birthday and Louise had packed a gift-wrapped
book about horses for the young girl. Her car was found with this present in sight, not far from John's cottage.
Brett Morgan told police he didn't have a problem with Louise visiting her ex for the weekend,
as he knew they were just friends. When he'd received a call from John Mazumweb the day after
Louise left saying she'd never arrived, Brett assumed she'd just
decided to visit Brenda Misson instead. After Louise failed to return home and her car was
found near John's cottage, Brett's attitude changed. Detectives knew they needed to speak
to John May Zornweve and they visited him at his workplace,
the University of Ottawa.
He said that he'd last spoken to Louise on the evening of Friday, April 21, the day before
she left.
John had invited Louise to his family's cottage for dinner that night, but she had declined
the invitation.
John said that he hadn't been expecting Louise to visit the
following day, even though Brett Morgan and one of Louise's friends were aware of this plan.
Moreover, John had called his ex-wife on Sunday April 23 to express his concern that Louise hadn't arrived. He'd also alerted Brett Morgan.
John claimed that on the day Louise disappeared he'd picked up his daughter from horse riding
and then spent the day with her. Investigators didn't verify this alibi at the time as they
felt certain it was true. They didn't believe that anyone would implicate their young daughter
if they had committed a crime. However, they did take sniffer dogs to a secluded lot owned by
John Maisornweve to see if they could uncover any trace of the missing woman. They found nothing.
With no sign of Louise and no evidence as to her whereabouts, the case stalled. Investigators wondered if she might have been targeted by an enemy of Brett Morgan's, namely
the former cellmate he'd implicated in the murder of a woman.
The cellmate was named Larry Fisher, and at the time of Louise's disappearance he was a free man,
not yet charged with the murder he was accused of. What if Larry Fisher had targeted Louise Ellis
as an act of revenge against Brett Morgan for ratting him out? Detectives looked into
Fisher's whereabouts on the day in question and found that on the morning of Saturday April
22, Fisher was the subject of a police road stop in Saskatchewan. This was roughly 3,000 kilometres
away from where Louise's car was found, ruling Fisher out of the investigation.
Meanwhile, by early May, Brett Morgan had hired two private investigators to follow up on the
various leads that were trickling in. He told the Ottawa citizen that he had done so because
the local police force was understaffed and unable to keep up with the investigation.
When a television news reporter asked Brett how he was feeling, Brett replied,
television news reporter asked Brett how he was feeling, Brett replied, Increasingly terror-filled.
Marie Perrant was a businesswoman based in Saint-Pierre de Wakefield, Quebec.
Originally from Scotland, she had relocated to Canada in 1990 in an effort to build a
relationship with her estranged father, who was French-Canadian.
Once settled, she took ownership of a restaurant and a video store,
but neither of these businesses were her true passion. Marie was more interested in detective
work. In February of 1995, she enrolled in a three-month course at the Academy of Private Investigators,
with a view to maybe becoming an investigator herself one day.
As the course was nearing completion, Marie heard about the disappearance of freelance writer
Louise Ellis. Louise's car was found just 25 minutes away from Marie's home, and the news
coverage of the event caught Marie's attention.
Marie had a particular interest in helping women who were victims of violence,
and while there was no clear evidence that Louise had been attacked,
it was obvious that something about the situation was wrong. Marie's attention was also drawn to
Louise's partner, Brett Morgan. She watched him appear on news updates about the
case, where he was visibly upset and helpless. Marie's heart went out to him. She wondered if
Louisa's disappearance could be a chance for her to practically apply the skills she learnt in her
private investigator course. On Wednesday May 17 1995, Marie Perrant called Brett Morgan's home number and left a message
on his answering machine, offering to help him.
He called her back two hours later but explained he already had two private investigators working
the case and he couldn't afford to pay a third.
Marie reassured him that she didn't want any money, she just wanted to help and gain
some professional experience. The pair agreed to meet and two days later, Marie drove over to the
double story red brick home in old Ottawa South where Louise and Brett lived. Marie had brought
along a tape recorder and asked Brett if he minded her taping their conversation.
He didn't, and Marie hit record as they began to speak at the couple's kitchen table.
They discussed the events of the weekend that Louise went missing and speculated as to what
might have happened. A few different scenarios were considered, including that Louise might have been abducted
by a stranger. Perhaps someone had parked their vehicle on the shoulder and feigned car trouble,
and when Louise pulled over to help, they grabbed her.
Brett Morgan eventually told Marie that he had a specific suspect in mind.
He believed that Louise's ex, John Maisonweve, was behind her
disappearance. John's cottage wasn't far from the area of River Road where Louisa's car was found.
Brett thought the police should be looking at John, but they didn't seem interested.
Over the next few weeks, Marie began conducting her own investigation. She met with Brett Morgan
again and spoke with him over the phone a number of times. But Marie had more difficulty making
contact with Louise's other loved ones. Most of Louise's family and friends wouldn't talk to her.
parents. Most of Louise's family and friends wouldn't talk to her. After visiting the area where Louise's Jeep had been abandoned, Marie began to agree with
Brett Morgan that a random attack by a stranger wasn't likely. The Jeep had been locked up
with all of Louise's things inside. If Louise had only gotten out for a moment to help someone in need or had been dragged out
against her will, then why would she have locked the doors? Marie kept digging and one month after
taking on the case she had a breakthrough. She asked Brett Morgan to speak with her so she could
update him. On Tuesday June 20, almost two months after Louise went missing, the pair met up again.
Marie explained that she had convinced John Mazormweb to be interviewed and had noticed
a few discrepancies in his version of events. She had also spoken to a friend of John's who had
told her something John had confided in them. According to this friend,
John and Louise had gotten into an argument because John wanted Louise to leave Brett,
but she refused. Marie was coming around to Brett's theory that John Maisonweb had killed Louise.
She asked Brett what he thought John would have done with Louise's body.
Brett didn't think John would have taken it far.
Carrying a dead body would be like carrying a sack of potatoes, he said. Most likely,
John would have dragged Louise into some nearby bush, maybe just 50 or 60 feet in from the road.
Marie suggested that the two of them go searching for Louise together. If they could recover her remains, then John Maisonweve would be charged
with murder. Four days later, Marie Perrant and Brett Morgan met up near Wakefield at around noon, then headed
together towards John Maisonweb's cottage.
They spent five hours searching the nearby woods, driving along dusty country roads and
occasionally pulling over to cast their eyes over the brush.
But they found nothing.
Undeterred, Marie kept working the case. Soon she had another update. A few days later,
she met up with Brett again at a local restaurant to tell him that John Maisonweb had taken a
polygraph test and failed. Brett remained adamant that Louise's body must be somewhere near John's cottage. The pair made plans to go out searching
again the following day. But their plans fell through at the last minute when Brett left a
message saying he couldn't make it. He was too distraught at the prospect of finding Louise's
body. The thought of it had kept him up all night and he hadn't had much sleep.
The pair arranged to go searching another day, but Brett cancelled those plans as well.
Frustrated, Marie told Brett that she was fed up with his lack of cooperation and by the way he
was leaving all the work to her. Brett apologised and the pair finally met up again at a local restaurant.
They sat outside and drank beers while discussing the case.
Marie told Brett that it was imperative they find Louise. The police wouldn't be able to lay
charges without a body and any inheritance that Brett was entitled to would be tied up as long as she was
only a missing person. Brett finally acquiesced and said he would go looking with her the following day.
On Thursday July 6 1995, Marie Perrant and Brett Morgan met up in Wakefield once again.
They began to search a particular wooded section, with Brett driving Marie along various roads
throughout the area. Sometimes he would backtrack over a road he'd just headed down as though he
was lost. At one point he told Marie, I don't have a clue where I am.
Finally, they arrived at Irwin Road, an obscure dead-end dirt road about 10 kilometres west of
Wakefield. A dense thicket of trees separated the road from the forest within. Brett led
Marie through the wooded area, pushing back branches as they walked.
They exited the tree line and came across a clearing with a pine tree.
Pine needles and dead branches that had fallen from the tree were scattered all over the ground.
Marie noticed something else lying nearby and said,
noticed something else lying nearby and said, Look, there's something over there, brat.
Clothing was strewn about, including a blue coat, a sweater, and two running shoes.
What appeared to be a bone was protruding from the sweater.
Lying a couple of feet away from the clothing was dark brown human hair, and on a mossy patch
right by the coat was a human skull.
It's Louise, said Brett Morgan, before bursting into tears. Case file will be back shortly.
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I want to tell you about Buried Bones, the historical true crime podcast on the Exactly
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Case file listeners might recognise the name Paul Hulls from our six part East Area rapist
Golden State Killer series. Paul was instrumental
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Each week Paul and Cade examine a different case from history and use their years of experience
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century forensics to bring new insights into these very old tragedies. Some cases are still cold and others have been resolved, but was the right person held accountable? Together,
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Thank you for listening to this episode's ads. By supporting our sponsors,
you support Casefile to continue to deliver quality content. Detective Bob Pulfer had been one of the first Ottawa investigators to review Louise Ellis'
missing persons report after Brett Morgan filed it. He'd also conducted one of Brett's early
interviews and was struck by his polite and cooperative demeanour. Although Ottawa detectives were
intrigued by Bratt's criminal history, they held no suspicions at this stage and viewed him only
as a witness. On the evening of Friday April 28, five days after Louise was reported missing,
Detective Pulfer was following up on some of Brett's statements. Brett had told investigators that on the last day
Louise was seen, he had gone to the bank at around noon to deposit a check for Louise in the amount
of $3,700. On his way home, he stopped at a 7-Eleven store and used Louise's bank card to withdraw
$250 for himself. Brett arrived home at around 1pm, gave Louise her bank card back,
and she departed between 1 and 2. However, when Detective Pulfa checked Louise's bank records,
he found the deposit had been made at 1.32pm, and Brett withdrew the $250 at 2.53pm. This significant discrepancy was enough to make
the detective suspicious. He requested Brett be placed under 24-hour surveillance.
A wiretap issue was ordered and a bug was placed on Brett Morgan's phone.
The discrepancy in Brett's statement wasn't the only cause for suspicion.
Although he presented as a soft-spoken man with a rough past who'd redeemed his ways,
the truth was more alarming.
Decades earlier, when Brett Morgan was 15 years old, he had gotten into a romantic relationship
with a girl one year his senior
named Sandra who became pregnant. Brett had lied to Sandra about his age telling her he was actually
18 and when she found out the truth she was deeply disturbed. The relationship soon turned
abusive with Brett hitting, slapping and pushing Sandra. The young couple broke up, but Brett begged
for a second chance. They got married and Sandra gave birth to a boy named Christopher.
The abuse continued and escalated, with Brett now choking Sandra, dragging her around by her hair
and throwing his boots at her. Once again she left him, this time moving
back to her hometown. She and Brett later reconciled and the cycle of violence continued.
Sandra became pregnant with the couple's second child but during a fight,
Brett repeatedly punched her in the stomach which led to her losing the baby. In another argument, Brett smeared his
own blood on the walls and told Sandra the only way they would part would be through death.
Eventually, Sandra succeeded in escaping Brett and obtaining a divorce.
In 1975, Brett Morgan entered into another relationship with a woman named Christine.
He borrowed huge amounts of money from her with promises to repay it.
He said he was expecting a huge insurance payout from the death of his daughter.
He also claimed he was about to inherit a $30,000 property from his recently deceased aunt.
But Christine never got her money back. She would
later find out Bratt had no daughter or aunt. Christine wanted out of the relationship. One
night when they were out for dinner she told Bratt she was leaving him. He seemed to accept this,
but then when they were driving home he suddenly stopped the car and said,
If I can't have you, no one will. Then he grabbed her throat, hit her head against the car window,
and began strangling her. Christine fought back desperately. Brett told her,
You fucking bitch, I'm going to kill you. Nobody leaves Brett Morgan.
Christine thought she was going to die. She was aware there was a police cruiser with its
lights on up ahead and traffic had formed in a line behind it. Christine managed to open the
passenger door and throw herself out of the vehicle. There was a taxi nearby, and she got in.
Brett Morgan would later track her down and beg for her forgiveness through tears,
but Christine left Canada for Florida and never saw him again.
Then there was the case of Gwen Telford, the 21-year-old woman who Brett Morgan had killed
in 1978.
Gwen had a three-year-old daughter and did sex work to support her child.
She was good friends with Brett Morgan's latest girlfriend, though Brett himself disliked
Gwen and often made derogatory remarks about her.
The three had lived together in shared accommodation
until Gwen moved out in late October of that year. She began staying in a hotel while looking for
something more permanent. At around 2.30am on Friday November 3, Brett and a 17-year-old
girl went back to Gwen's hotel room with her. The three sat around for about an hour,
drinking a bottle of wine. Then Brett suddenly stole money from Gwen's purse and ordered her
to undress. She did. Brett told the 17-year-old to go into the bathroom or he would kill her also.
He bound Gwen's hands behind her back with a
pair of pantyhose, then shoved her down on the bed. Brett then jumped on Gwen's chest and began
choking her with his hands, stating, die you bitch, die. The 17-year-old heard the killing from the bathroom. After Gwen was dead, Brett left the hotel with the 17-year-old and dropped her off at home.
Gwen's body was found later that day by hotel cleaning staff.
When the police began investigating her murder, Brett helped them with the investigation.
Eventually, he was charged with and convicted of first degree murder.
But after it was found that the presiding judge had mischarged the jury, a second trial
was held.
This time, Brett was instead found guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter and sentenced
to 10 years.
When Louise Ellis met Brett Morgan more than a decade later, she didn't know the full extent
of his violent history.
Instead, she was left struck by his courage in coming forward to testify for a wrongly
incarcerated man.
Louise later described their first encounter in her diary, writing,
That morning he insinuated himself into my life irrevocably. His words were carefully chosen,
his voice resonant. I couldn't help but wonder what a nice guy like that was doing in a place like
prison. Louise was a passionate and highly intelligent woman with strongly held convictions
about right and wrong. She'd struggled with romantic relationships in the past, finding them hard to
sustain when the early honeymoon phase gave way to the ordinary nature of everyday life.
In Brat Morgan, she saw someone with whom she could have the all-consuming love she so desired.
She was attracted to what she saw as his honesty and simplicity.
His working class background was very different to her middle class one, but it was a case
of opposites attracting.
Above all, Louise appreciated how safe and loved Bret made her feel.
Initially, from the outside, they appeared to be a happy couple.
Yet, cracks started to appear even before Bret was released from prison.
The couple swung between euphoric highs and painful lows.
They had screaming arguments over the phone which left Louise drained and despondent.
She never told her family members that her new partner had been convicted of manslaughter, instead telling them only that he'd committed fraud.
After Brett was released from prison, the things that had initially attracted Louise to him began
to repel her. She found his tastes crude and realised how different their values and opinions
were. While Louise was an intellectual who loved to read and debate ideas, Brad didn't have an
inquisitive mind at all. Within two months of moving in with Louise, Brad was already
physically assaulting her. She wrote in her diary that he had shoved her, gripped her arm,
poured beer over her head, pushed her down on the bed and refused to let her up, and punched a hole
in the wall. He also made verbal threats. A tenant who resided on the upper level of Louise's home
sometimes heard screaming coming from downstairs. Louise became overwhelmed by
despair and self-loathing and wrote notes to herself on how she could be a better partner.
These low points were punctuated by brief windows of joy, honeymoon phases where Brett
would be affectionate and loving. One day Louise wrote in her diary, I love going places with Brett. He's keen,
he's beautiful to be seen with, he's friendly. The next day she described an argument they had
where Brett pinned her down and was frothing at the mouth. This relationship is either going to
kill me or cure me," Louise wrote.
The month before Louise went missing, she went to the hospital for x-rays after suffering
a blow to her sternum.
She told a number of friends and acquaintances that Brett was responsible.
As well as learning about Brett Morgan's physical abuse of Louise, detectives discovered that he'd
also taken advantage of her financially. Louise had always been very responsible with money and
was a good saver. She supported Brett by buying him clothes, food and letting him move in with her.
She also purchased a truck and tools for him as part of a home renovation business
they started together named Morales, a portmanteau of their two surnames. But the business never took
off and the brand new truck disappeared. Brett would say it had been taken by a biker gang that
was shaking him down. The gang was supposedly extorting Brett as revenge for
his testimony against his former cellmate, Larry Fisher. Louise complained to friends that Brett
would take her bank cards without asking and withdraw cash. He rapidly drained her bank account
and ran up her credit card debt. Four months before Louise vanished, Brett forged a
check on her personal line of credit for $7,000. The next month he forged another for $5,400.
When Louise discovered Brett was stealing from her, he claimed he needed the money to pay off
the biker gang. Brett didn't just steal from Louise, he targeted her loved ones
too. On one occasion, Brett helped out Louise's father by performing some repairs on his bathroom.
After Brett left, Louise's father discovered that one of his credit cards was missing.
It would later be traced back to friends of Brett's who used it in a shopping spree.
Bratt's abuse and stealing took a toll on the relationship and in December 1994,
Louise asked him to move out. The following month, he moved into his own basement apartment,
but he was told to leave in February after someone broke into the landlord's
home upstairs. Louise took him back. They agreed it would be a temporary fix, with Brett moving
out again on May 1. He had told investigators that their decision to live separately didn't
mean their relationship was in trouble. By April 1995, Brett owed Louise more than $23,000.
He said he would pay her back as soon as a friend from Toronto named Bob lent him the
money.
Bob was apparently going to wire Brett the money by mid-April and Brett would then transfer
it to her. Louise was extremely
anxious to receive the funds, telling friends she was down to her last $200. She also told them that
her relationship with Brett was over, whether he paid her back or not. She was sick of him controlling and using her. On Friday April 21, the day before Louise went
missing, she called her bank at least twice to check whether a bank transfer had come through.
It hadn't.
After police began bugging Brett Morgan's phone, they soon intercepted regular calls he was having with a Scottish woman named Marie Perrant.
On Tuesday June 15, about a month into Marie's contact with Brett, an Ottawa detective contacted
her to ask how she knew Brett Morgan.
Marie explained that she was an aspiring private investigator who had been working with Brett.
Although she'd initially
reached out to him due to sympathy, the truth was she'd been experiencing certain doubts ever
since their second meeting. While listening over her tape recording of that conversation,
Marie had noticed something strange. They had been discussing Louise's car and the way it was
found. Marie asked Brett whether the driver's
seat was still in the same position it would have been if Louise was the last to drive it. If it had
been pushed back, that might indicate a taller man had left the car there. Brett replied,
exactly the way I left. Then he abruptly stopped, as though catching himself and
changed his answer to, exactly the way Louise left it.
On reflection, this struck Maria as suspicious. She'd also noticed other things. Most of Louise's
clothing and jewellery had gone, as though she wasn't expected to return.
Nor were there any women's toiletries in the home's bathroom. When Louisa's loved ones found out
that Marie was working with Brad Morgan, none of them would speak to her. They were all
convinced that he was behind her disappearance.
Detectives Bob Pulver and John Savage asked Marie if she would visit the police station
and bring her taped interviews with her.
She agreed.
During their meeting, Detective Bob Poolefer asked Marie what she thought had happened
to Louise.
She told him that she thought Brett Morgan had murdered her. This was the detective's belief as well. They asked
Marie whether she would be willing to go undercover for them. When Marie asked what they would need
her to do, Detective Pulver replied, perhaps you could find out what Brett Morgan knows about the disappearance of Louise Ellis.
Marie agreed to help and Detective Savage looked at her, then jokingly said,
well, maybe you could find the body too. From that point on, Marie Perrant was a double agent.
At the police's request, she lied to Brett Morgan, telling him that she'd
interviewed Louisa's ex John Maysornweb and there were discrepancies in his story. She also claimed
that a friend of John's told her about an argument between him and Louise. Brett had appeared stunned
when she shared this information. Marie said that if they wanted
John convicted of Louise's murder then they needed to find Louise's remains. She encouraged Brett to
think of where Louise might be, telling him with her perseverance and his criminal mind they should
find the body. Brett was quick to speculate where Louise might be, but he also seemed to harbour some
suspicions about Marie.
He began making references to undercover cops, and told Marie that when a friend came to
visit him, Brett had insisted on patting him down to check for hidden listening devices. Marie asked him
if he thought she was an undercover cop. He laughed and said no.
During their first search for Louise's remains, Brett pulled out a bandana and, without saying
a word, wrapped it around Marie's neck. This scared her, as he had already told her how he had previously
strangled a woman, so she pushed his hands away. Brett told her it was just a gift to keep her
cool during the search. As they looked, a police helicopter hovered nearby. This clearly made Brett
anxious, and his search was lackluster. He looked like someone taking a
casual walk through the woods instead of searching for a body. Marie told detectives how the
helicopter had spooked Brett, and they didn't dispatch it again. Nevertheless, Brett appeared
reluctant to search again after that, cancelling plans a couple of times.
Marie became more insistent, and the two eventually met up at a restaurant.
Brett admitted he sometimes wondered if Marie was an undercover officer,
telling her she was… either that or a great actress.
or a great actress?"
"'Well, I'm not,' Marie replied."
Brett began to hit on Marie, making suggestive remarks about her appearance and kissing her.
She felt like throwing up, but instead kissed him back, terrified that if she didn't, her cover would be blown. This seemed to convince him, and the pair made plans to search again the following day of
Thursday July 6. After leading Marie straight to Louise's remains, Brett Morgan began to sob and
wail. To Marie, it looked like a performance. Then his eyes glazed over and he stared at her in a way that felt
menacing. Worried that he might be regretting having led her to the body, Marie tried to play
along by touching his face comfortingly and whispering soothing words. Brett then seemed
to snap out of his sudden aggressive mood. They took photographs of the scene with a
camera they'd brought along. Then Brett said he wanted to know how far they were from John
Maisonweb's cottage. They drove to City Hall to examine a map. Brett estimated the spot where
Louise lay was roughly two miles from John's cottage and said happily,
that's pretty close, you know. Brett wanted to report the discovery to police,
but Marie suggested they phone in an anonymous tip-off instead. After they parted ways,
she phoned Detective Bob Pulfer and took him to the remains. Dental records confirmed
they belonged to Louise. Because they were so badly decomposed, there was no way of knowing
how Louise had been killed. But detectives had a theory. They knew that Louise was on
the verge of leaving Brett, which would cut him off from her money. If she
reported him for his fraudulent activity, his parole may be revoked. The bathroom was the only
room in the house with no windows and nowhere to run. During a search of the home, police had
noticed the shower curtain was missing. Brett had told them it ripped when he tried to clean it in the washing machine, so he'd
thrown it out.
But detectives suspected that Brett had attacked Louise while she was in the shower.
He had probably strangled her, as he had Gwen Telford almost two decades earlier, and Louise
had instinctively grabbed at the curtain, tearing it down.
Brett had later wrapped Louise's body in the curtain and placed it in the trunk of her Suzuki
sidekick Jeep. He had dumped her in a location close to John Maisonweb's property in an attempt
to frame the other man. Because of Brett's criminal background, he knew he needed to deflect
attention to another suspect. Then he had abandoned Louise's vehicle in a secondary location that was
also near John's property before cycling home on a bike he'd stashed in the vehicle.
Brett's seemingly cooperative demeanor and public pleas to the press were further attempts
to appear innocent. It was a role he'd taken on previously after killing Gwen Telford when
he initially aided police in their investigation. Although he appeared to be conducting his own
searches for Louise in the first weeks after she went missing, police surveillance revealed he'd only spent a total of four hours
and 45 minutes doing so. These brief searches took place over four different days in the
area where Louise's car was found. In addition to searching with Marie Perrant twice, he'd
also gone out once with a friend and another time with a reporter. There didn't appear to be any systematic
searching. Police surveillance also revealed that Brett had started a new relationship with a woman
just six weeks after Louise went missing, despite presenting himself as a grieving and
heartbroken spouse, lost without his soulmate. The Gadeno Hills were a sprawling area and there were so
many secluded spots around the Wakefield area that police believed locating a body there would
be like finding a needle in a haystack. They were certain that only Louise's killer was capable of finding her.
Brett discovering Louise after very little searching finally gave them the evidence they needed to charge him. On the same day that Louise was found, detectives arrested Brett Morgan and
charged him with first degree murder. His trial began more than two years later in September 1997. It lasted six months,
with more than 90 witnesses testifying, including private investigator Marie Perrant.
Brett Morgan pleaded not guilty, with the defence arguing that the police had ignored
all other possible suspects, such as Louise's ex, John Mazormweb.
After learning that Louise's partner had a criminal record, detectives had gotten tunnel
vision and focused exclusively on him. They also claimed that investigators didn't search for Louise's
remains in an attempt to goad Brett into doing so, and argued that Brett had no motive to kill Louise.
She had helped him out financially and assisted in obtaining his parole.
But the prosecution pointed to Louise's growing insistence on being paid back and her intentions
to end the relationship.
They called numerous witnesses who testified as to Louisa's anxiety around her financial situation.
In the days before her death, she was chasing up the funds Brett owed her
and openly discussing how violent he was.
The jury deliberated for three days before returning with a verdict. Guilty.
returning with a verdict. Guilty. Louise's family and friends wept, shouted, applauded, and hugged each other with relief upon hearing the news. Brett Morgan was expressionless as he stated,
I didn't do this, your honor. The judge addressed him, stating,
You planned and deliberated upon the killing of Louise
Ellis, a young woman in the prime of her life, who gave everything she had in an attempt
to assist you in your reintegration into society.
She was an intelligent, vibrant, highly creative, fiercely loyal and loving human being, who
shall be sadly missed by her family and those who loved her.
Implicit in the jury's verdict is that you wrongfully accused an innocent man,
John Maisonweff, of being responsible. That treacherous act speaks very poorly about your
moral fibre. He sentenced Brett Morgan to 25 years without the possibility of parole. Afterwards, Brett's lawyer
insisted that he believed his client was innocent and they would appeal the verdict. But two months
into Brett Morgan's sentence, he died in prison due to hepatitis C. It was April 24, 1998, three years to the day since
he had reported Louise missing. For Marie Perrant's role in convicting Brett Morgan,
police awarded her $4,600. She later told the National Post that she was offended by this reward, saying,
"...it felt like a slap in the face after all I had done."
Over the years, Marie has appeared in multiple documentaries to discuss her role in the Louise
Ellis case and has been working on a memoir about her time as a private investigator.
working on a memoir about her time as a private investigator. After Brett Morgan's trial, Louise's father, brother and sister said that the result had restored their faith in the justice system.
Although they were still overwhelmed by pain, knowing that Louise had been found and her killer
punished helped somewhat. Louise's father Alan said he would forgive Brett Morgan for his actions,
stating, "...never return evil for evil. Never."
After Louise's remains were recovered, a funeral was held at Glebe St James United Church in Ottawa.
Two hundred mourners packed into the space to memorialise Louise, who was remembered as a passionate,
artistic and intellectual woman who was deeply spiritual and had great integrity.
She was an excellent cook and a very talented writer.
In 1976, she wrote and illustrated a children's book titled The Alpha Vegdebet,
which taught children about the alphabet and vegetables.
The minister presiding over the service encouraged all those present to remember Louise's story,
stating, "...if there is anger here this afternoon, I hope it is a righteous anger.
If there is anger here this afternoon, I hope it is a righteous anger. Louise, her life and her death calls us to action.
Women are abused, every day, and it is not right.
Not now, not before, and not again. I I want to tell you about Buried Bones, the historical true crime podcast on the Exactly
Right Network.
It's hosted by journalist Kate Winkler Dawson and retired investigator Paul Holes.
Case file listeners might recognise the name Paul Holes from our six-part
East Area rapist to Golden State Killer series. Paul was instrumental in identifying Joseph
D'Angelo as the perpetrator and was interviewed as part of that series. Each week Paul and Cade
examine a different case from history and use their years of experience and 21st century forensics to bring new
insights into these very old tragedies. Some cases are still cold and others have been resolved,
but was the right person held accountable? Together, Kate and Paul break down these cases,
discuss evidence and reflect on how far we've come thanks to modern forensics.
evidence and reflect on how far we've come thanks to modern forensics. Don't miss new episodes every Wednesday. Follow Buried Bones wherever you get your podcasts.