Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Query about crack led to 'date' with accused killer
I met Jane on Monday afternoon at her workplace, a nasty stretch of street just north of the CPR mainline commonly known as the low track.
Earlier that day, the Winnipeg Police Service had announced the arrest of a suspected serial killer and career criminal with a surname that is disarmingly gentle.
Related Items
Lamb.
Jane -- the name she wanted to use -- agreed to talk about her reaction to the news, which is how I came to tell you in Tuesday's column about the tribute stone she'd laid in the nearby Vineyard Church memorial garden that honours so many of Winnipeg's slain and missing aboriginal women. A place that might have had a plaque for Jane, too, had it not been for the good people at the Vineyard Church who answered her call for help several years ago when she crawled to their door after a "bad date" butchered her belly with a knife.
There's much more to Jane's story, though, which I only learned after deadline Monday evening, when my lady of the low track called back. Jane's voice had an urgent edge. She said she had just seen Shawn Cameron Lamb's photo on TV, and we needed to talk again.
It was about her run-in with a man she suspects was Lamb.
So it was that late Monday night we ended up at a Main Street bar of her choice, where Jane talked about the man accused of killing three aboriginal women like her. Well, perhaps not exactly like her.
Jane was born a John.
Jane said her encounter happened about three weeks ago in front of the Point Douglas flophouse where she lives, which is in the same neighbourhood where Lamb lived.
"I was all sexified up, going to work," Jane recalled. "He was just walking by. He said, 'Do you know where to score some crack?' "
There was nothing unusual about that, or threatening about him.
Quite the opposite.
"He was very charming."
As Jane told it, they went to his place to get high, and in Jane's case, even higher.
It was about an hour-and-a-half later when his charming manner changed.
"Totally changed," Jane said.
"He was very mean after a while.
"He was getting really, really, really aggressive."
And forceful.
"He had a grip on my head..."
She remembers them both ending up naked and him paying, partly in crack and partly in cash that he ended up taking back. The sun was just coming up when she got up to leave. Escape might be a better word for it, because she said he ripped her clothes off as she was trying to go.
"I walked home in my panties and bra," Jane said. "I kind of ran home, actually."
Which was obvious, because as Jane was reliving that night, it felt more like a post-traumatic debriefing than a newspaper interview. And there was a moment -- between the time the pizza arrived and when she wanted another vodka -- that Jane asked if we could stop. Although she really couldn't.
She started talking instead about how her eyes teared up when she watched the television report on Lamb's arrest.
"I can't even count on both hands how many friends I've lost."
Then, ever so briefly, she began to count. There was the friend whose remains were found decomposed. The body of a friend that was recovered from the river. And another friend who still hasn't been found.
"I've got a gazillion friends," Jane said, in another reflective moment. "I don't know how many are real friends or fake friends."
Given that sex-trade workers on the streets are supposed to watch out for each other -- to help protect one another from those who would harm them -- Jane's doubts about her friends is troubling.
As is her conclusion.
"All I've got is myself, which gets lonely sometimes. But for some reason, I manage to get through. Suicide is the last thing on my mind."
That, Jane suggested, is because of what she remembers her church-going grandparents telling her.
"They told me I'd go to hell," Jane said. "But then again, I probably am already."
gordon.sinclair@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition June 28, 2012 B1
More Local
- Back to Top
- Return to Local
More Local
(1 of 23 articles for today)
Heritage Winnipeg hosting 10th annual Doors Open Winnipeg this weekend
2:20 PM 0Poll
Most Popular Local
- Man dies after being pulled from vehicle submerged in Winnipeg retention pond
- Developers to unveil plans for bold downtown tower
- Grocer Joe Cantor dies at 88
- Core grocer a challenge: expert
- Apple trick on Ellen falls short for city woman
- A new mom's booze-fuelled hell
- Links plan loses on scorecard
- Famous city grocer loved job, customers
- Couple faces new charges of sexual assault
- Firefighters put out blaze in Manitoba Avenue home
- Charleswood deaths being investigated as domestic incident
- Man charged, victims identified in double homicide
- Man dies after being pulled from vehicle submerged in Winnipeg retention pond
- Sex charges for ex-club boss
- '2 minutes after I read the winning numbers, I retired': Winnipeg lotto winner
- Police identify slaying victims
- Aboriginal leader Elijah Harper dies
- Apple trick on Ellen falls short for city woman
- 'Responsible Winnipeg' ads appear on sign run by mayor-owned Goldeyes' baseball park
- Woman killed in head-on crash in southwestern Manitoba
- Hundreds pitch in to dig out houses damaged, destroyed by Ochre Beach ice floe
- A child-custody catastrophe
- Charleswood deaths being investigated as domestic incident
- Man charged, victims identified in double homicide
- Co-worker 'sick' today? Maybe it's the $17M flu
- Man dies after being pulled from vehicle submerged in Winnipeg retention pond
- '2 minutes after I read the winning numbers, I retired': Winnipeg lotto winner
- Parents, community relieved and elated as missing boy found safe
- No threat from bag found at Winnipeg Square
- Man missing since 2009 found safe
- Developers to unveil plans for bold downtown tower
- Grocer Joe Cantor dies at 88
- Famous city grocer loved job, customers
- Core grocer a challenge: expert
- Manitoba appointees violate feds' rules
- 'It's a beautiful story': There's not always a tomorrow to say you're sorry or make things right
- Francophone paper turns 100, digitizes all editions
- Mental-health patients get own ER
- The end of the credit card?
- Goose gets cooked in Linden Woods
- Crushing blow for amateur sport
- Aboriginal leader Elijah Harper dies
- Fishing for fashion
- Developers to unveil plans for bold downtown tower
- Province introduces changes to rules governing landlords, renters
- Woman killed in head-on crash in southwestern Manitoba
- Sex charges for ex-club boss
- Grocer Joe Cantor dies at 88
- Newly minted MD a beacon for kids in youth program
- North End proud
- Hundreds pitch in to dig out houses damaged, destroyed by Ochre Beach ice floe
- Mental-health patients get own ER
- A child-custody catastrophe
- An uncommon phenomenon
- Steen invests $1M in family entertainment centre
- Earls on Main going, but new one coming
- Province introduces changes to rules governing landlords, renters
- Crushing blow for amateur sport
- Boost same-sex curricula: union
- Ochre Beach residents are 'thankful everybody got out'
Ads by Google











The Winnipeg Free Press is not accepting comments on this story.