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'Horrifically, grisly scene': Remains of woman found near Winnipeg apartment block

WINNIPEG — The name Rebecca Contois reverberated down a back lane Thursday night, days after her partial remains were found there. Dozens of people raised fists in the air and said the young Indigenous woman's name out loud four times. "We love you.
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After attending a homicide scene on Edison Avenue in the North Kildonan area of the city on Monday, Winnipeg police investigate at this location on McKay Avenue and other scenes, including a city landfill, Thursday, May 19, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/John Woods

WINNIPEG — The name Rebecca Contois reverberated down a back lane Thursday night, days after her partial remains were found there. 

Dozens of people raised fists in the air and said the young Indigenous woman's name out loud four times.

"We love you. We honour you," said one speaker before a group of drummers sang a traditional song outside an apartment building in the north part of Winnipeg.

Darryl Contois organized the vigil for the 24-year-old. He said he is not an immediate relative but got to know Rebecca Contois and her family last year. 

He said she was bright, liked talking to people and had a good sense of humour. He last spoke with her in the winter and they talked about his work leading searches for missing people in Manitoba.

"To me, it's all closure for families," he told the crowd. 

"We all have a heart. We all have loved ones at home ... let's (show up) for them and show them that we love them still."

Winnipeg police Const. Rob Carver said someone called police Monday after spotting "something that was of concern" outside the apartment building. 

Officers focused their search around a garbage bin near the building. Carver called it a "horrifically, grisly scene."

On Thursday, police identified the victim as Contois.

"This is a tragedy for the entire community and the city," Carver told a news conference. 

Carver said officers were also searching a landfill, the Brady Road Resource Management Facility, as part of the investigation.

"Due to the nature of the circumstances surrounding this investigation, homicide investigators have not ruled out the possibility of additional victims," he added.

Carver did not comment on why investigators believe there could be others but said, "there are things that are leading investigators to look at that as a potential possibility."

Jeremy Anthony Michael Skibicki, 35, was charged with first-degree murder Wednesday and remains in custody.

Officers executed a search warrant at his home, which is in the area of the apartment block. Contois and Skibicki were known to each other, said Carver. 

He added that it's very likely Contois was killed not long before her remains were found. 

Investigators began searching the landfill Monday and were still there Thursday afternoon. 

Carver said searching the landfill is a difficult task. 

"That is going to be a long ongoing operation ... police resources will be focusing on this for quite some time," he said. 

"We understand the environmental risks to our own officers who are going to be out there, to cadets who might be out there. There are hazmat concerns, which we have to take care of and plan for. We'll be using all the resources at our disposal."

Carver said that could include the use of drones and a canine search team. 

Angie Tuesday, who is a family resource and support advocate, said she has been in touch with the woman's family and they are "going through an intense period of grieving."

"This was their loved one. This was their girl," she said.

She said they have asked for privacy. 

“This is traumatic. It is very troubling news for them and they deserve some respect.”

During the vigil, family and friends formed a circle around Contois's mother, who declined to speak. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 19, 2022.

Brittany Hobson, The Canadian Press