Author Topic: Janet Gail Henry | Missing | June 1997  (Read 255 times)

Carol-Lynn

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Janet Gail Henry | Missing | June 1997
« on: December 24, 2007, 01:45:40 PM »
Native Indian female, 37 years, 5 foot 3 inches (160cm),
115 pounds (50kg), brown hair, brown eyes, glasses.
Henry is a known drug user and sex trade worker in the
downtown eastside area.  Last seen June 1997
« Last Edit: December 26, 2007, 07:32:48 PM by Chris »

Edsonmom

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Re: Janet Gail Henry | Missing | June 1997
« Reply #1 on: June 24, 2009, 07:48:01 PM »
Family, friends of missing women awaiting Pickton appeal
 
 
By Lori Culbert, Vancouver SunJune 24, 2009 9:34 PM

VANCOUVER — It was nearly 12 years ago that Sandra Gagnon last heard from her sister Janet Henry, whose face is one of 64 on a police poster of women missing from Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.


So it is with a heavy heart that Gagnon will attend the B.C. Court of Appeal in Vancouver on Thursday to learn the fate of Robert (Willie) Pickton, who was convicted of killing six of the missing women and is charged in the deaths of another 20.


Henry is among the 38 women whose whereabouts remain unknown, but many of whose relatives and friends have carefully followed the Pickton proceedings.


"It's really tough because it's Janet's anniversary," Gagnon said. "I feel a bit of anxiety because you never know how (the Appeal Court decision) is going to go.


"And we still haven't found Janet. My family and I are still in limbo. We don't have any answers about where she is."


Three B.C. Court of Appeal justices are set to rule at 10:30 a.m. Thursday on appeals by the Crown and the defence, which were heard during a nine-day hearing in late March and early April this year.


Defence lawyer Gil McKinnon argued Pickton's six second-degree murder convictions should be overturned because a B.C. Supreme Court judge made an error during his charge to the jury and while answering a question by the jury during the 2007 trial.


The Crown's position was that if Pickton's six convictions are upheld, prosecutors will not proceed with a second trial on the remaining 20 counts. Pickton, 60, would then continue to serve his life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.


But if the Appeal Court rules in Pickton's favour and orders a new trial, the Crown wants to proceed on all 26 counts of first-degree murder.


Regardless of how the court rules, the Crown or defence is expected to seek leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada, which would drag these legal proceedings out even longer.


"You know when you hold your breath, and hold your breath, and hold it so long it hurts? That's what it feels like," a frustrated Maggy Gisle said Wednesday.


Gisle followed the trial closely because she was friends with four of the six women Pickton was convicted of killing, in particular Georgina Papin, who died in 1999. But she was also good pals with Cara Ellis, one of the other 20 women Pickton is accused of murdering, and whose case will never be tried if there is no second trial.


So for Gisle, there is no clear victory that could come out of the court.


"I'd like to see the remaining 20 go to trial because if not, the victims and the family members are denied a due process, which is everybody's right," she said.


While it may seem counter-intuitive, Judy Trimble, Cara Ellis's mother, is hoping Pickton wins his appeal because she wants him to be tried for her daughter's murder.


"I'm just keeping my fingers crossed and keeping my hopes up that he's going to win his appeal, then there will be another trial and he will be tried for all 26," Trimble said.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

http://www.canada.com/news/Family+friends+missing+women+awaiting+Pickton+appeal/1729325/story.html

Edsonmom

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Re: Janet Gail Henry | Missing | June 1997
« Reply #2 on: July 23, 2009, 12:07:54 AM »
Taken from her family Janet Henry - missing since June 28, 1997

Janet Henry comes from the KwaKwaQueWak Nation in Kingcome Inlet in British Columbia. She was the youngest in a family of thirteen. Her siblings have many happy memories of their childhood together. Although their mother fell ill with lupis and rheumatoid arthritis and had to undergo many operations, the older children were able to look after their younger siblings. Their father, a logger and fisherman, ensured that the family never went without. The eldest daughter, Donna Henry, recalls growing up immersed in a very rich culture. When Janet Henry was young, Donna Henry practiced traditional dances and songs with her.

The security the family once enjoyed was short lived. The three oldest children were taken away to residential school. After the death of their father, their mother no longer had anyone to help her care for the younger children. Janet Henry and four of her brothers and sisters were placed in foster homes.

One of Janet Henry’s sisters, Sandra Gagnon, describes the break up of the family as the beginning of "a living nightmare." Many of the siblings lost both their ties to their culture and their sense of self-esteem. Their years in residential school or foster homes were followed by alcoholism and depression. Their sister Lavina was raped and murdered when she was 19. Another sibling killed himself.

In the midst of all the trauma the family had been subjected to, Sandra Gagnon remembers how they always expected that Janet would have a bright future ahead of her. "Janet was really a brilliant young woman," she said. "I never could have imagined what happened to her." Janet Henry graduated from high school and attended hairdressing school. She got married and had a daughter, to whom she was devoted.

However, when Janet Henry’s marriage broke up in the late 1980s, her husband gained custody of their daughter. Janet Henry was devastated. Donna Henry recalls, "I watched my baby sister spiral." Janet Henry eventually ended up living in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, a low income neighbourhood known for drug and the street level sex trades. Her family learned that she had begun attending parties where she engaged in sex in exchange for drugs.

It was a dangerous life. Violence against sex workers in the Downtown Eastside is all too common. By 1990, however, women in the Vancouver sex trade, and the families of women who had gone missing from the downtown Eastside, had begun to suspect that there was more to this danger than random acts of violence.

Janet Henry was apparently aware of the danger and therefore phoned her brothers and sisters frequently to let them know she was okay. The last time they heard from her was in late June 1997.

Janet Henry’s family quickly became worried about her when her usual telephone contacts with them ceased. Sandra Gagnon and her brother went to the Downtown Eastside neighbourhood looking for her. After a few days, they reported her missing to the police. Because the small amount of money that Janet Henry had was still in her bank account, the family feared the worst.

Sandra Gagnon believes the police initially had one or two suspects in mind and did what they could to follow these leads. However, once these suspects were ruled out, she says the family heard less and less from the police. She speaks positively of the officers who initially investigated her sister’s disappearance. However, like other family members whose sisters and daughters disappeared from the Downtown Eastside during this time, Sandra Gagnon feels the city and the police force should have acknowledged the wider pattern of disappearances much sooner and taken concerted action to ensure the safety of women in the Downtown Eastside. "They never took the threat seriously," she says. "I can guarantee you that if it wasn’t the Downtown Eastside and they weren’t hookers, something would have been done in an instant."

In April 1999 family members of missing women called on the police to issue a reward for information about the women who were going missing in the Downtown Eastside. Although police had recently offered rewards for information about robberies in more affluent neighbourhoods of the city, they initially declined to do so in the case of the missing women. Instead the city suggested offering a $5000 reward for any of the missing women who came forward, implying that they did not believe they had been victims of foul-play. Mayor Owen said, "Police have said there is no indication of crimes. Why don’t we start with [the $5000 reward] until we find out that someone is killing these women?"

Under mounting pressure from the families and increasing media coverage of the issue, the police force eventually changed its position. The first posters offering a reward for information on the missing women were distributed in July 1999. A small group of officers was assigned to work on the disappearances on an ongoing basis. In 2000, the RCMP joined the review of evidence. A larger task force was formed the following year.

On 6 February 2002, the Vancouver City Police/RCMP Task Force moved into a farm in Port Coquitlam, outside Vancouver and sealed it off. For 21 months, they conducted one of the largest police searches in Canadian history. On the basis of evidence collected at the farm, the Crown initially laid charges against Robert Pickton, the owner of the farm, for the murder of 15 women who had gone missing from the Downtown Eastside, the vast majority of which were women who went missing after 1997.

Robert Pickton’s case is expected to come to trial in 2005 or 2006 on at least 22 charges. In the meantime, the investigation of other women missing from the Downtown Eastside continues. By April 2004, the number of cases under investigation by police had grown to 60 women and one transgender person. Nineteen of the missing women are Indigenous.

Janet Henry is not among the women whose DNA has found at the Port Coquitlam farm. One of Janet Henry’s sisters went through the clothing and other belongings found by police at the farm but didn’t recognize anything of Henry’s. Family members continue to hope that their sister is still alive, but are slowly giving up hope. "I go into denial and just keep hoping that maybe she just went far away and she has been unable to get a hold of us," said Donna Henry. But deep down inside, I know. We will probably never see her again."
http://www.missingpeople.net/taken_from_her_family_janet_henr.htm

 

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A documentary casefile about the murder of nine year old Sharin' Morningstar Keenan on January 23, 1983, Toronto. Radio, Television, and Online versions of this story are all unique in their own way and together form the whole program. click here