Read Practically Perfect Online

Authors: Dale Brawn

Practically Perfect (36 page)

8: Killers on the Run

Henry Séguin:
From Ontario to British Columbia

  
July 30, 1925  
  
Henry Séguin born in Cornwall, Ontario.  
  
March 16, 1935  
  
Séguin’s first arrest; he was ten years old.  
  
March 25, 1939  
  
Séguin released from reformatory; returns home to his parents.  
  
September 27, 1939  
  
Convicted of theft; returned to reformatory.  
  
January 28, 1942  
  
Convicted of break and enter; sentenced as adult to seven months in jail.  
  
December 16, 1942  
  
Sentenced to six months in jail for theft.  
  
July 12, 1943  
  
Convicted escaping lawful custody and other offences; given two more years.  
  
August 25, 1944  
  
Escapes from jail and goes on crime spree.  
  
September 29, 1944  
  
Joins Canadian Armed Forces to avoid being recaptured.  
  
November 1, 1944  
  
Séguin recaptured and sentenced to two years more.  
  
January 22, 1945  
  
Séguin dishonourably discharged from the Canadian Armed Forces.  
  
December 7, 1946  
  
Released from Kingston Penitentiary.  
  
May 29, 1947  
  
Convicted of break and enter; sentenced to two years in penitentiary.  
  
February 8, 1952  
  
Released from Kingston Penitentiary.  
  
April 12, 1952  
  
Burns house trailer; steals some of its contents, including a .22 calibre rifle.  
  
August 16, 1952  
  
Séguin murders Leonard Hurd.  
  
August 22, 1952  
  
Warrant issued for arrest of Séguin.  
  
August 28, 1952  
  
Séguin hired by lumber company; near Williams Lake, British Columbia.  
  
October 2, 1952  
  
Séguin, calling himself Henry Godin, meets Fred and Jean Labie.  
  
October 25, 1952  
  
Séguin’s unusual looking car found in a bush near Quebec border.  
  
November 3, 1952  
  
Jean leaves Fred.  
  
November 7, 1952  
  
Police begin questioning people around Williams Lake about Séguin.  
  
November 8, 1952  
  
Séguin, a.k.a. Godin, leaves Williams Lake with Labie for Kamloops.  
  
November 14, 1952  
  
Séguin and the Labies move into a duplex together.  
  
November 17, 1952  
  
Last time the Labies seen alive.  
  
December 13, 1952  
  
Séguins packs up and leaves Kamloops.  
  
December 15, 1952  
  
Séguin arrives in Williams Lake; robs bank.  
  
December 16, 1952  
  
Séguin shot and captured.  
  
December 22, 1952  
  
Police in B. C. learn than man in custody is Henry Séguin, not Godin.  
  
January 8, 1953  
  
Séguin released from hospital; placed in police cell.  
  
January 12, 1953  
  
Séguin appears at preliminary hearing.  
  
January 17, 1953  
  
Pleads guilty to three charges related to robbery; sentenced to five years.  
  
March 16, 1953  
  
British Columbia Court of Appeal dismisses Séguin’s appeal.  
  
April 26, 1953  
  
Transferred from B.C. to Kingston Penitentiary to appear on murder charge.  
  
August 19, 1953  
  
Preliminary hearing; bound over for trial.  
  
October 26, 1953  
  
Murder trial begins in Cornwall.  
  
October 28, 1953  
  
Found guilty and sentenced to hang on January 19, 1954.  
  
December 15, 1953  
  
Ontario Court of Appeal rejects Séguins appeal.  
  
January 6, 1954  
  
Asks Supreme Court for permission to appeal; justice of that court says no.  
  
January 16, 1954  
  
Stay sought; denied; B.C. officer questions Séguin about the missing Labies.  
  
January 18, 1954  
  
Federal government rejects application for clemency.  
  
January 19, 1954  
  
Minutes before being taken to scaffold Séguins commits suicide.  
  
September 18, 1955  
  
Remains of Labies and their dog found in British Columbia by worker.  
  
February 15, 1956  
  
Inquest into deaths of the Labies held; Séguin held to be their killer.  
  
April 9, 1956  
  
Remains of Fred and Jean Labie buried in Kamloops.  

 

Walter Pavlukoff:
From British Columbia to Ontario

  
1929  
  
Pavlukoff’s father dies.  
  
1933  
  
Nineteen-year-old Pavlukoff commits first crime.  
  
1938  
  
Twin sisters die of tuberculosis after long illnesses.  
  
July 11, 1938  
  
Arrested in Chicago on five counts of robbery; deported to Canada.  
  
August 2, 1938  
  
commits armed assault in Vancouver; sent to prison.  
  
1940  
  
Paroled; almost immediately commits robbery; sent to jail for three years.  
  
March 9, 1944  
  
Arrested with holster, mask, ammunition; gun found within a few days.  
  
1945  
  
Pavlukoff sentenced by Vancouver court to three years on gun charge.  
  
August 25, 1947  
  
Vancouver bank manager shot during bank robbery.  
  
August 25, 1947  
  
Clothes worn by Pavlukoff during robbery found; hat found in a different location.  
  
August 26, 1947  
  
Police find tailor who made suit; Pavlukoff charged with murder; warrant issued.  
  
August 27, 1947  
  
Pavlukoff shows up unannounced at shack near rural C.P.R. right of way.  
  
August 28, 1947  
  
Reward of $5,000 for arrest of Pavlukoff offered by bankers association.  
  
August 29, 1947  
  
Largest manhunt in history of British Columbia underway.  
  
August 31, 1947  
  
Revolver found on beach; a hotel key found in a different location.  
  
September 2, 1947  
  
Search comes up empty; authorities locate room occupied before bank robbery.  
  
January 1, 1952  
  
Sick and hungry, Pavlukoff taken to hospital; known as Ralph McRae.  
  
May 23, 1952  
  
Magazine runs photo of Pavlukoff; Toronto police receive tip he is in the city.  
  
June 1952  
  
Anonymous tipster tells police he has seen Pavlukoff on a Toronto street.  
  
January 8, 1953  
  
Pavlukoff Canada’s second most wanted man; arrested on Toronto street.  
  
January 9, 1953  
  
Killer breaks down in tears when advised he was being charged with murder.  
  
January 11, 1953  
  
Arrives in Vancouver; allowed to speak with his mother and sister.  
  
January 12, 1953  
  
Makes first appearance in Vancouver courtroom; remanded one week.  
  
January 24, 1953  
  
Pavlukoff identified in police lineup by a witness to the robbery.  
  
January 26, 1953  
  
Preliminary hearing begins; defence lawyer agrees to holding him for trial.  
  
April 1, 1953  
  
Pavlukoff found guilty of murder; sentenced to hang June 23, 1953.  
  
July 8, 1953  
  
British Columbia Court of Appeal denies Pavlukoff’s appeal.  
  
July 8, 1953  
  
Pavlukoff stabs himself to death after being advised; appeal rejected.  
  
July 14, 1953  
  
Inquest into Pavlukoff’s suicide adjourned for one week.  
  
July 28, 1953  
  
Pavlukoff’s execution date.  

9: Pictures on the Dash

Owen “Mickey” Feener

  
1926  
  
Cathy Essers born in Belgium.  
  
1934  
  
Kay Chouinor born.  
  
1937  
  
Mickey Feener born in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia.  
  
1942  
  
Dolly Woods born.  
  
1945  
  
Feener shot in the head; three months in hospital; given up by his parents.  
  
1957  
  
Twenty-year-old Feener marries a fifteen-year-old young woman.  
  
1958  
  
Cathy Essers immigrates; establishes a dress business in Nova Scotia.  
  
March 26, 1959  
  
Feener becomes father to a baby girl.  
  
April 14, 1959  
  
Dolly Woods disappears from Kirkland Lake rooming house.  
  
October 1959  
  
Feener receives careless driving ticket, which he does not pay.  
  
October 1959  
  
Feener’s wife charges him with not supporting her and their daughter.  
  
June 1960  
  
Skeleton of Woods discovered near Ontario-Quebec border; not identified.  
  
July 1960  
  
Essers moves to Toronto, where she meets Conrad Walther.  
  
September 20, 1960  
  
Thirty-four-year-old Essers disappears on way from Toronto to New Glasgow, Nova Scotia.  
  
October 1, 1960  
  
Essers reported missing by fiancé, Conrad Walther of Bradford.  
  
October 1, 1960  
  
Unidentified person attempted to cash a cheque drawn Esser’s account.  
  
October 4, 1960  
  
Feener appears at home of Kay Chouinor; she agrees to go out that evening.  
  
October 4, 1960  
  
Last time red-haired twenty-six-year-old Kay Chouinor seen alive.  
  
October 5, 1960  
  
Unidentified body (Essers) found in ditch near Fredericton.  
  
October 5, 1960  
  
Chouinor’s employers reports her missing.  
  
October 5, 1960  
  
Feener arrested in Kirkland Lake for failing to pay careless driving fine.  
  
October 1960  
  
Police reopen missing person investigation of Dolly Woods.  
  
October 8, 1960  
  
Investigators from Timmins interview Feener in his cell in Kirkland Lake.  
  
October 8, 1960  
  
RCMP in Fredericton charge Feener with offering an indignity to a body.  
  
October 9, 1960  
  
Badly beaten body of Kay Chouinor found near Timmins.  
  
October 9, 1960  
  
Feener charged with murdering Chouinor.  
  
October 12, 1960  
  
Feener remanded to October 26, 1960, for a preliminary hearing.  
  
October 26, 1960  
  
Feener remanded to trial in spring 1961.  
  
December 1960  
  
Feener granted a new preliminary hearing.  
  
January 20, 1961  
  
Feener remanded to trial at second preliminary hearing.  
  
March 6, 1961  
  
Feener’s trial in Cochrane, Ontario gets under way.  
  
March 8, 1961  
  
Jury convicts Feener of murder after deliberating fifteen minutes.  
  
March 9, 1961  
  
Two local newspapers found in contempt for coverage of trial.  
  
May 15, 1961  
  
Ontario Court of Appeal dismisses appeal from Feener’s conviction.  
  
June 12, 1961  
  
Feener confesses to murdering Dolly Woods.  
  
June 13, 1961  
  
Feener hanged at Haileybury Jail.  
  
June 13, 1961  
  
Police begin searching for the body of Dolly Woods.  
  
June 14, 1961  
  
Body of Dolly woods located on Quebec side of Ontario-Quebec border.  

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