Murder victim was in court for brutal kidnapping
TORONTO - A 27-year-old gunned down in the city’s east end over the weekend — just steps away from a memorial event for another Thanksgiving murder victim — was allegedly among a group of thugs who kidnapped, tortured and held a man for ransom last year.
Toronto Police don’t believe Dane Dillon’s slaying had anything to do with the violent abduction or Sunday’s gathering to remember Kareme Parks, 20, who was shot and killed at the same housing complex in 2006.
“But I am hoping somebody at that memorial saw what happened,” homicide Det.-Sgt. Pauline Gray said Tuesday.
She said there were “a lot of people” at the O’Connor Community Centre and those who lingered afterward may have witnessed the shooting out front of the nearby highrise off Victoria Park Ave. south of Eglinton Ave. E.
Even if they saw something leading up to the murder, someone being shoved, Gray said such information could be helpful.
“It may seem totally innocuous but we want to know about it,” she said.
Police were called to 90 Parma Ct. just after 11 p.m. Sunday and found Dillon in the parking lot suffering from fatal gunshot wounds to his torso.
Detectives are viewing video seized from several cameras but so far haven’t released a description of the gunman.
Earlier in the day an event was held in Regent Park to remember seven murder victims slain on Thanksgiving over the last five years.
Parks’ mother Debbie attended that event, then hours later held her own memorial in the community centre at Parma Ct. for her son, who was shot dead at a nearby basketball court.
“I don’t believe that event had anything to do with the homicide,” Gray said.
Dillon is now the eighth person to be killed in Toronto on Thanksgiving in five years. He’s also the city’s 37th murder victim of the year.
The Scarborough resident and four others were accused of abducting a man near Jane St. and Wilson Ave. and burning him with a clothes iron in April, 2010.
They allegedly drove the 24-year-old to a hideout in Hamilton and demanded a five-figure ransom from his family. The victim was released in Toronto a day later and no money was paid to his captors.
Gray urged people to remember the charges against Dillon were still before the courts.
And regardless of whether or not he was an unsavoury character, she said his killer remains on the loose and he’s thought to be armed and dangerous
Toronto Police don’t believe Dane Dillon’s slaying had anything to do with the violent abduction or Sunday’s gathering to remember Kareme Parks, 20, who was shot and killed at the same housing complex in 2006.
“But I am hoping somebody at that memorial saw what happened,” homicide Det.-Sgt. Pauline Gray said Tuesday.
She said there were “a lot of people” at the O’Connor Community Centre and those who lingered afterward may have witnessed the shooting out front of the nearby highrise off Victoria Park Ave. south of Eglinton Ave. E.
Even if they saw something leading up to the murder, someone being shoved, Gray said such information could be helpful.
“It may seem totally innocuous but we want to know about it,” she said.
Police were called to 90 Parma Ct. just after 11 p.m. Sunday and found Dillon in the parking lot suffering from fatal gunshot wounds to his torso.
Detectives are viewing video seized from several cameras but so far haven’t released a description of the gunman.
Earlier in the day an event was held in Regent Park to remember seven murder victims slain on Thanksgiving over the last five years.
Parks’ mother Debbie attended that event, then hours later held her own memorial in the community centre at Parma Ct. for her son, who was shot dead at a nearby basketball court.
“I don’t believe that event had anything to do with the homicide,” Gray said.
Dillon is now the eighth person to be killed in Toronto on Thanksgiving in five years. He’s also the city’s 37th murder victim of the year.
The Scarborough resident and four others were accused of abducting a man near Jane St. and Wilson Ave. and burning him with a clothes iron in April, 2010.
They allegedly drove the 24-year-old to a hideout in Hamilton and demanded a five-figure ransom from his family. The victim was released in Toronto a day later and no money was paid to his captors.
Gray urged people to remember the charges against Dillon were still before the courts.
And regardless of whether or not he was an unsavoury character, she said his killer remains on the loose and he’s thought to be armed and dangerous