Every Place Has a Story

S5 E50 Myfanwy Dorothy Sanders

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Wild Roses:

It was just after 5:00 pm on Friday, November 9, 1945, and Pamela Argyle was walking her dog. She decided to take a rarely used shortcut that crossed through the field near Burnside Road and Grange Street in Saanich on Vancouver Island. As she passed by a clump of wild rose bushes, she saw the body of a young girl covered by a green winter coat.

Pamela did not touch the body. She ran up Burnside Road to find a phone to call police.

Myfanwy Dorothy Sanders, known as Dot to her friends and family, had been missing for just over three weeks. She was found just blocks from her home wearing the same clothes that she had worn to work on the day she was reported missing.

Myfanwy Sanders
Myfanwy (Dot) Sanders, Victoria Times Daily, October 25, 1945
No one searched for her:

Clearly, the police had not thoroughly searched the area around her house, or perhaps not searched at all.

I learned of Dot’s existence completely by accident. I was putting together a story about Molly Justice, a 15-year-old girl who was murdered two years earlier (and in episode 49 of the podcast). She was found in the same general area and a short newspaper article with the heading “two mysteries not yet solved,” mentioned the names of both girls.

It makes me sad to look at Dot’s smiling photo in the Victoria Times Daily taken shortly before her death. Not only did she have a tough life she was treated horribly in death. Her disappearance wasn’t taken seriously and nobody looked for her.

Jury brings back open verdict:

Later, when her body was found and it was determined that she was murdered, the coroner’s jury were directed to bring in an open verdict. They said that she died from suffocation (either smothered or strangled), and they didn’t have enough evidence to decide how, when, or why she died. It effectively closed her case and nobody investigated her murder. She’s not listed as an unsolved murder in Saanich, in fact when I spoke to the Saanich Police when I was researching Dot’s story for Cold Case BC, they hadn’t heard of her at all.

Myfanwy (Dot) Sanders
Sgt. Eric Elwell is crouched down while Corporal Cecil Pearce and Inspector Roger Peachey look on at the crime scene. Victoria Daily Times, November 10, 1945.

There are three potential suspects in Dot’s murder: Vernon Blanchard, who died in 2004 in Victoria, leaving behind four children and eight grandchildren; Arthur Sanders, Dot’s father; or a complete stranger.

Should you wish to ask Saanich police why Dot’s murder case is not listed on their books, the number to call is 250-475-4321.

 

Show Notes:

Sponsor: Erin Hakin Jewellery

Music:   Andreas Schuld ‘Waiting for You’

Intro and voiceover:  Mark Dunn

Sources:

Vital Statistics

Coroner’s Inquest

Interviews with Sanders’ family and acquaintances and Saanich Police

Cold Case BC: The stories behind the Province’s most intriguing murder and missing cases

Related:

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NO AI TRAINING: any use of this publication to “train” generative artificial intelligence (AI) technologies to generate text is expressly prohibited. The author reserves all rights to license uses of this work for generative AI training and development of machine learning language models.

 

 

S5 E49 Murder at Swan Lake

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In January 1943, fifteen-year-old Molly Justice, took the 5:50 pm bus from her job in Victoria, BC to her home near Swan Lake. Because war-time dim-out regulations were in force, there was no lighting along the streets, and that may be why Molly decided to take the short cut home along the unlit tracks by Swan Lake, shaving off almost half-a-kilometre from her walk.

Molly Justice
Times Colonist, June 14, 1996

Her body was found a few hours later lying face down in the snow. She had been stabbed more than 20 times and hit on the head with a rock.

What followed was one of the most seriously botched police investigations of the century.

An innocent man was put on trial, a teenage rapist was ignored, evidence was lost, and rumours of a conspiracy that reached right up to the Attorney General’s office wouldn’t be investigated until more than 50 years after the murder.

Molly Justice
The Justice home on Brett Avenue in Saanich, 2019

Ironically, the new headquarters for the Saanich Police Department was built right next door to Molly’s crime scene in the 1960s. It serves as a reminder that this unsolved murder remains officially open, partially solved and most likely, permanently sealed.

Times Colonist, January 21, 1943
Show Notes:

Sponsor: Erin Hakin Jewellery

Music:   Andreas Schuld ‘Waiting for You’

Intro:  Mark Dunn

Interview: Constable Graham Walker, Saanich Police Department; T.W. Paterson, historian and author.

Sources:

Vital Statistics

Coroner’s Inquest for Molly Justice, BC Archives

The personal files of Inspector John F.C.B. Vance.

Newspapers: Daily Colonist, Province, Vancouver Sun

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