Canada

Family seeks justice in murder case

October 06, 2013 12:16 PM

Calgary: It's been six years since Jacqueline Crazybull was executed in one of the city's most odd unsolved homicide cases.

On Sunday, her friends and family are arranging a peace walk, maintaining a specific end goal, which is to sway witnesses to approach so police can at long last lay charges in Crazybull's killing.

Crazybull, 44, was the first victimized person in a hour-long wounding spree at the hands of an aggregation of men July 11, 2007.

In only one hour between 4 and 5 a.m. that day, five chumps all through the city were cut by the aggregation driving around ambushing individuals.

Crazybull was at a seat on seventeenth Avenue and eleventh Street S.W. when she was approached by the men. Police say they began a discussion with the chump and after that ambushed her.

Crazybull was the stand out to expire.

Police have since discharged photographs of three suspects, maxim they've studied the stabbings were defeated "kicks."

Examiners say they require more proof. No captures have been made.

This has been destroying for Crazybull's friends and family, her sister says.

"I don't need it simply to vanish from individuals' brains. I don't comprehend what else I can do," said Sandra Crazybull-O'hara.

"She merits the respect, she didn't merit to get slaughtered and for the story to vanish, and for her existence to not have any importance."

On Sunday at twelve, as they have for as far back as five years, family, companions and supporters are wanting to meet at 219 eighteenth Avenue S.W., and joined by local drummers, stroll to the spot where Crazybull was killed.

They call it Justice for Jackie Walk.

"We're continually pondering who might do this," said Crazybull-O'hara.

"We're pondering what are her executioners doing now?"

Crazybull, who had eight kids, will never meet the half twelve grandchildren they have now given her.

"She might have been a lovely grandma. We were not primed for that," said Crazybull-O'hara. "Our spirits were broken, our lives were hindered in the most repulsive way."

The yearly peace walk is a way friends and family can keep the force on the executioners, she said.

 

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