Current Problems

Justice (25-42)

An Indigenous Woman Was Found Dying on a Sidewalk. What Happened?

April 12, 2024

An advocate is calling for transparency in the Vancouver police investigation.

A few bouquets and a small teddy bear are placed beside a post on a sidewalk.
A memorial at the site on Kingsway in Vancouver where a 37-year-old woman died on March 30. Photo for The Tyee by Jen St. Denis.

The Tyee: Flowers marked the spot where a 37-year-old Indigenous woman was found dying on a Vancouver sidewalk just before dawn on March 30. Despite first responders’ efforts, she died at the scene.

Two weeks after her death, an advocate for abused women is calling for transparency around the disturbing death, noting police have released little information.

The Vancouver Police Department released video on April 4 of a black vehicle making a U-turn in front of what appeared to be a pixelated shape, and are asking the public to contact the VPD if they have any information about the vehicle. 

On April 4, the Vancouver Police Department shared a video of a black vehicle making a U-turn where the dying woman was found. Video via the Vancouver Police Department.

Angela Marie MacDougall, the executive director for Battered Women’s Support Services, said she would like to know more about the circumstances of the woman’s death and the police investigation.

“We have another potential femicide,” she said. “I want to know more about the details…. What are the factors around this woman’s death? And then also, what are the police doing or not doing? And what are the factors that we need to be thinking of in terms of looking at the broader issues around gender-based violence, femicide, intimate partner violence and sexual assault?”

So far police have shared none of those details, saying the cause of death has not yet been determined. Police have also not released the woman’s name or whether her death is being investigated as a homicide.

The Tyee visited the scene of the woman’s death on April 4 and found a memorial of flowers at the spot where she died in front of the Greater Vancouver Baptist Church at 4440 Victoria Dr.

A note on one of the bouquets read, “Oh my baby girl know that you were and always will be loved and missed forever. RIP, love Mom.”

First Nations, Métis and Inuit women are 12 times more likely to be murdered or go missing than non-Indigenous women, according to the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

Indigenous women are six times more likely to be murdered than non-Indigenous women, according to Statistics Canada. Those homicides are less likely to be solved by police, and when charges are laid, a first-degree murder charge is less likely compared with non-Indigenous victims.

image atom

Chelsea, Noelle and Tatyanna Went Missing. Did Police Do Enough to Find Them?

READ MORE 

Advocates have also tracked a sharp increase in the number of women killed in Canada since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2019, 136 women were killed by violence in Canada, according to numbers tracked by the Canadian Femicide Observatory; in 2023, 187 women were killed, a 36 per cent increase compared with 2019.

Vancouver police are also investigating what they say is a “targeted” homicide of a 49-year-old woman who was discovered on April 3 at Rosemont Drive and East 57th Avenue in South Vancouver.

MacDougall said she keeps a close eye on police investigations into the deaths of Indigenous women.

She said it’s also important to get information on the identity of the women, in order to track whether they were receiving services from various organizations and what help they may have been lacking.

“There are still a number of suspicious deaths of Indigenous girls and women that have not received, from our point of view, the level of police intervention and transparency that we expect,” MacDougall said. 

Jen St. Denis, The Tyee

Jen St. Denis is a reporter with The Tyee covering civic issues. Find her on X @JenStDen.

Are you part of The Tyee’s critical 1%?

Thanks for reading The Tyee today — we hope this article added to your day in some way. Our team of independent journalists takes pride in doing in-depth reporting and taking time to get it right.

We’re able to focus our attention on publishing impactful journalism in the public interest, and publish it for free for all to read, because we have the support of Tyee Builders. Tyee Builders are readers who contribute a bit of money — at a level and frequency of their choice — to support our editorial budget.

This core of supporters — making up about 1 to 2 per cent of our daily readership — enables us to pay our writers, keep our articles free and open to all, and not bombard our readers with annoying ads while you try to read.

Instead of focusing on what kind of articles will attract the most advertising dollars, we can spend time devoted to researching and writing stories that our readers find most valuable and make the most positive impact in our region.

If you’d like to join thousands of readers who help make independent journalism possible, consider joining Tyee Builders. Thank you.

— Jeanette Ageson, Publisher

Click here to Join Tyee Builders