close
close

Failed police efforts to identify Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe detailed in Winnipeg serial killer trial

Failed police efforts to identify Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe detailed in Winnipeg serial killer trial

In mid-March 2022, a young Indigenous woman stood outside the Winnipeg Salvation Army and spoke with a man who invited her to his home.

Wearing a reversible Baby Phat jacket and a cloth mask, she later boarded a bus with the man and headed to his apartment in the North Kildonan area.

The woman was the first victim of serial killer Jeremy Skibicki.

In the two years since his murder, police have been unable to identify him or find his remains.

To members of the Indigenous community, the police and the justice system, she is known as Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe, or Buffalo Woman, a name given to her by a group of Indigenous grandmothers.

“Our community embraced her. We wanted her to have a name and we wanted her to belong to a community,” said Thelma Morrisseau, who participated in the naming ceremony.

“She needs to be honored and respected.”

Police have released some updates on their efforts to identify Buffalo Woman. However, details of their exhaustive efforts were revealed this month during Skibicki’s trial, which is scheduled to continue in June.

Skibicki, 37, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the killings of Buffalo Woman and three others – Morgan Harris, 39; Marcedes Myran, 26; and Rébecca Contois, 24 years old.

His lawyers said he killed the four Indigenous women but should not be found criminally responsible because of mental illness.

Crown prosecutors say the killings were racially motivated and that Skibicki preyed on vulnerable women in homeless shelters.

The faces of three First Nations women are depicted side by side.
From left to right: Morgan Harris, Marcedes Myran and Rebecca Contois. Skibicki is on trial for the deaths of the three women, as well as an unidentified woman named Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe, or Ox Woman. (Submitted by the Winnipeg Police Service and Darryl Contois)

The court heard he assaulted the women, strangling or drowning them and dumping their bodies in rubbish bins. Myran and Contois were dismembered.

On the first day of the trial, prosecutor Renée Lagimodière said Skibicki had kidnapped Buffalo Woman “because he thought she was taking some of his things,” before suffocating and drowning her in her bathtub.

When police announced in December 2022 that Skibicki had been charged with the murder of the unknown woman, they were unable to provide many details about him.

Police said they believed she was Aboriginal and was around 25 years old. They said she was probably killed around March 15 of that year.

The only other clue about the woman made public came from photos of a Baby Phat jacket. Police said she may have been wearing something similar to the black and white bomber jacket.

The trial learned more about the jacket. Police seized the unwashed coat in the summer of 2022, after Skibicki told investigators he sold it online through Facebook Marketplace. He said he threw out the rest of Buffalo Woman’s things.

The jacket was analyzed along with evidence from Skibicki’s suite to try to determine the identity of Buffalo Woman.

DNA found on a lapel of the jacket is the only evidence police have indicating his identity.

“We continue to try to take advantage of any (tips) we receive from the public regarding the identity of Buffalo Woman,” said Sgt. Dave Barber testified.

A series of four photographs shows a jacket.  Two photos at the top show the front and back of a black jacket, with a gray fur-trimmed hood.  Two photos at the bottom show the jacket reversed, with black and white horizontal stripes.
DNA found on the lapel of a Baby Phat jacket is the only evidence police have that points to Mashkode Bizhiki’ikwe’s identity. (Submitted by the Winnipeg Police Service)

Conversations in the community have centered on speculation about whether the woman was from Manitoba or even Canada, added Morrisseau, who attended the trial.

“She has family somewhere…but no one has come forward. They haven’t been able to connect her to anyone, and I find that very disturbing,” she said.

Police became aware of Buffalo Woman’s death while Skibicki was being questioned for Contois’ murder in May 2022. He surprisingly told officers he killed Contois and three others.

Partial remains of Contois were found in a trash can in the Skibicki neighborhood that month. Other remains of it were later found in a landfill.

The remains of Myran and Harris are believed to be in another landfill. DNA testing at Skibicki’s apartment identified them as other victims.

Skibicki misidentified the victim to police

Skibicki initially gave police a name for Buffalo Woman, but it was the name of a person still alive.

He told police he met the victim outside the Salvation Army just north of downtown when there was still snow on the ground and the province had just lift restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Restrictions were lifted on March 15, 2022.

In a police interrogation video played during the trial, Skibicki described the unknown woman as five feet four inches tall, with a dark complexion and short hair.

Skibicki told police he was coming down from a psilocybin or magic mushroom high and was angry at Buffalo Woman after she tried to rob him. He said he strangled her before drowning her.

The last thing she did was insult him, he told police. “I understand why.”

He then threw his remains in a trash can.

A woman with long black hair and a black puffy winter jacket is standing outside.
Sandra Delaronde, a longtime advocate for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, is seen in a file image. She says Buffalo Woman’s case demonstrates the current breakdown of systems meant to protect vulnerable Indigenous women. (Cameron MacLean/CBC)

Sandra DeLaronde, a longtime advocate for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, also sat in court during the trial. She said Buffalo Woman’s case speaks to the current breakdown of systems meant to protect vulnerable Indigenous women.

“There are a lot of lessons to be learned from Buffalo Woman, especially her ability to support people who are homeless or unsheltered,” she said.

DeLaronde said she appreciates the Crown’s efforts to seek justice for Buffalo Woman.

A ceremonial buffalo headdress sat on the Crown table during the trial – a symbol of the unidentified woman who has not been forgotten and the families still seeking answers in other cases.

“She represents justice for all these families … who never got justice,” DeLaronde said.