| Confession of Murderer, Serial Rapist & Former Air Force Colonel Russell Williams Quote: David Russell Williams (born March 7, 1963), often referred to as Colonel Russell Williams, is a murderer, serial rapist, and former Colonel in the Canadian Forces.
From July 2009 to his arrest in February 2010, he commanded Canadian Forces Base Trenton, a hub for air transport operations in Canada and abroad and the country's largest and busiest airbase.
Williams was also a decorated military pilot who had flown Canadian Forces VIP aircraft for Canadian dignitaries such as Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, the governor general, the prime minister, and others.
On February 8, 2010, he was relieved as the base commander at CFB Trenton due to criminal charges.
He was formally charged by the Crown Attorney pursuant to provisions set forth in the Criminal Code of Canada on evidence collected by the Ontario Provincial Police with two counts of first-degree murder along with two counts of forcible confinement and two counts of breaking and entering and sexual assault; another 82 charges relating to breaking and entry were subsequently added.
On October 21, 2010, Williams was sentenced to two life sentences for first-degree murder, two ten-year sentences for other sexual assaults, two ten-year sentences for forcible confinement and 82 one-year sentences for burglary; all the sentences will be served concurrently at Kingston Penitentiary.
The life sentences mean Williams will serve a minimum of 25 years before parole eligibility. Since he has been convicted of multiple murders, Williams is not eligible for early parole under the so-called "faint hope clause" of the Canadian Criminal Code.
On October 22, 2010, Williams was stripped of his commission, ranks, and awards by the Governor General of Canada on the recommendation of the Chief of the Defence Staff.
His severance pay was terminated and the salary he received following his arrest was seized. Personal life
Williams was born in Bromsgrove, England in 1963 to Cedric David Williams and Christine Nonie Williams, before the family moved to Chalk River, Ontario where his father was hired as a metallurgist at Chalk River Laboratories, Canada's premier nuclear research laboratory.
After relocating to Chalk River, the Williams family met another family, the Sovkas, and they became good friends.
The families would spend a lot of time together. Russell Williams' parents divorced when he was six years old and soon after, Nonie Williams married Jerry Sovka.
During this time Williams took on the name Sovka from his stepfather Dr. Jerry Sovka, and moved again to Scarborough, Ontario.
While in the Scarborough Bluffs area, Williams began high school at Toronto's Birchmount Collegiate, but finished at Upper Canada College.
He delivered The Globe and Mail newspaper and learned piano. By 1979 his family had moved to South Korea, where Dr. Sovka was overseeing another reactor project.
Russell completed his final two years of high school as a boarding student at Toronto's Upper Canada College while his parents were in South Korea.
In his final year in 1982, he was elected as one of two prefects for his boarding house, and reported to his house steward, Andrew Saxton, now the Conservative Member of Parliament for North Vancouver.
On June 1, 1991 he married Mary Elizabeth Harriman, who is an associate director of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada.
According to Canadian Defence Department Williams biography, Williams is a keen photographer, fisherman and runner, and he and his wife Mary Elizabeth are also avid golfers.
The couple moved to Orleans, a suburb of Ottawa in July 2006. By then Williams had been posted to the Directorate of Air Requirements at NDHQ.
He served at the Airlift Capability Projects Strategic (CC177 Globemaster III) and Tactical (CC130J Hercules J), and Fixed-Wing Search and Rescue. Military service
Williams was regarded as a model military man over the course of his 23-year career.
He enrolled in the Canadian Forces in 1987 after graduating from the University of Toronto with an economics and political science degree.
He received his flying wings in 1990, and was posted to 3 Canadian Forces Flying Training School, based at CFB Portage La Prairie, Manitoba, where he served for two years as an instructor.
Promoted to captain on January 1, 1991, Williams was posted to 434 Combat Support Squadron at CFB Shearwater, N.S. in 1992, where he flew the CC-144 Challenger in the electronic warfare and coastal patrol role.
In 1994, he was posted to the 412 Transport Squadron in Ottawa, where he transported VIPs, including high-ranking government officials and foreign dignitaries, also on Challengers.
Williams was promoted to major in November 1999 and was posted to Director General Military Careers, in Ottawa, where he served as the multi-engine pilot career manager.
He obtained a Master of Defence Studies from the Royal Military College of Canada in 2004 with a 55-page thesis that supported pre-emptive war in Iraq, and in June 2004, he was promoted to lieutenant-colonel and on July 19, 2004 he was appointed commanding officer of 429 Transport Squadron at CFB Trenton, Ont., a post he held for two years.
From December 2005 to May 2006, Williams also served as the commanding officer of Camp Mirage, a secretive logistics facility believed to be located at Al Minhad Air Base in Dubai, United Arab Emirates that provides support to Canadian Forces operations in Afghanistan.
He was posted to the Directorate of Air Requirements on July 21, 2006 where he served as project director for the Airlift Capability Projects Strategic (C-17 Globemaster III) and Tactical (CC-130J Hercules J), and Fixed-Wing Search and Rescue, working under Lieutenant General Angus Watt at this posting.
In January 2009 he was posted to the Canadian Forces Language School in Gatineau, Quebec, for a six-month period of French language training, during which he was promoted to colonel by recomendation of now retired Lieutenant-General Angus Watt.
On July 15, 2009, Williams is sworn in as the Wing Commander at Canadian Forces Base Trenton, the country's busiest air base and locus of support for overseas military operations.
Located in Trenton, Ontario, the base also functions as the point of arrival for the bodies of all Canadian Forces personnel killed in Afghanistan, and the starting point for funeral processions along the "Highway of Heroes" whence their bodies are brought to Toronto for autopsy.
Williams has been described as an elite pilot and "shining bright star" of the military.
He had flown Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh, the Governor General of Canada, the Prime Minister of Canada, and many other dignitaries across Canada and overseas in Canadian Forces VIP aircraft. Investigation & arrest
Jessica Lloyd was a 27-year-old woman who had vanished January 28, 2010.
Investigators identified matched distinctive tire tracks left in snow near Jessica Lloyd's home.
One week after her disappearance, the Ontario Provincial Police conducted an extensive canvassing of all motorists using the highway near her home from 7 pm on Thursday, February 4, 2010, to 6 am on Friday, looking for the unusual tire treads.
Williams was driving his Pathfinder that day—and not the BMW he usually drove—and an officer noticed the resemblance of his tire treads. These were subsequently matched to the treads near Lloyd's home.
On Sunday, February 7, 2010, the CFB Trenton base commander was arrested in Quinte West following a 10-day search for Lloyd.
After a nine-hour interrogation in which he confessed to the numerous crimes of which he was later convicted, early the next morning Williams led investigators to the woman's body in a secluded area on Cary Road, about 13 minutes away from where he lived.
The 46-year-old colonel was also charged in the death of Corporal Marie-France Comeau, a 37-year-old military flight attendant based at CFB Trenton who had been found dead inside her home in late November 2009.
Along with the murder charges, Williams was charged with breaking and entering, forcible confinement, and the sexual assault of two other women in connection with two separate home invasions near Tweed, Ontario in September 2009.
According to reports, the women had been bound and raped in their homes, and the attacker had taken photos of them.
Williams was arraigned and remanded into custody on Monday, February 8, 2010.
The Canadian military announced the day that an interim commander would soon be appointed to replace him (Dave Cochrane took over 11 days later), and removed his biography from the Department of National Defence website the following day.
Hours after the announcement of Williams' arrest, police services across the country reopened unsolved homicide cases involving young women in areas where Williams, a career military man, had previously been stationed.
According to news reports, police began looking at other unsolved cases based on a full statement that Williams gave to police.
A week after his arrest, investigators reported that, along with hidden keepsakes and other evidence they had found in his home, they had matched a print from one of the homicide scenes to his boot.
In addition to the four primary incidents, the investigation into Williams includes probes into 48 cases of theft of women's underwear dating back to 2006.
In the searches of his Ottawa home, police discovered stolen lingerie that was neatly stored, catalogued, and concealed.
In April 2010, Williams was placed on suicide watch after he tried to kill himself by wedging a stuffed cardboard toilet paper roll down his throat. The Confession.
On February 7, 2010, Colonel Russel Williams was interrogated at Ottawa Police Service headquarters by Detective Sergeant Jim Smyth, a member of the Ontario Provincial Police's Behavioural Sciences Unit.
The interview started at 3 p.m. and by 9:35 p.m. he was describing his crimes.
The interrogation lasted approximately ten hours. The video confession of his crimes was shown in Court at the sentencing hearings for Williams on October 20, 2010.
The interrogation has been considered exceptional police work and it has been mentioned by experts as worth being used in police classes on this subject.
In the confession, Williams gave details of his crimes, including the sex assaults in Tweed and 82 fetish break-ins and thefts.
Some of them occurred in Ottawa homes within walking distance of Orleans, Ontario home where he lived with his wife.
Other break-ins and thefts occurred in Belleville, and in Tweed, where the couple had a cottage since 2004.
He also told police where they could find evidence, including hidden keepsakes, inside the Ottawa home.
The couple had moved to a new house just three nights before he was interrogated by Ottawa Police.
He told Detective Sergeant Jim Smyth where police could find the thousands of images he took, of Lloyd and Comeau and the two women he sexually assaulted.
He then identified on a map where he dumped Jessica Lloyd’s body.
A video of the interrogation was made available to the public and was posted online. Court proceedings and trial
Williams appeared before the Ontario Court of Justice in Belleville, Ontario via video link from the Quinte Detention Centre on July 22, 2010, where his next court appearance was set for August 26.
Again via video link, Williams waived his right to a preliminary inquiry and thus had his next appearance scheduled at the Ontario Superior Court of Justice for October 7, 2010.
Williams' lawyer stated then that his client would plead guilty to all 82 Criminal Code charges filed against him.
On October 18, 2010 Williams pleaded guilty to all charges.
On the first day of Williams' trial and guilty plea, details emerged of other sex assaults he committed, including the sex assault of a new mother who was wakened with a blow to the head while she and her baby were asleep in her house.
The first day of trial revealed that Williams also had pedophile tendencies, stealing underwear of girls as young as 9 years old.
He made 82 fetish home invasions and attempted break-ins between September 2007 and November 2009.
Russell Williams progressed from fetish break-ins to sex assaults with no penetration to rape and murder.
He kept detailed track of police reports of the crimes he was committing, logged his crimes, kept photos and videos and even left notes and messages for his victims.
In a break-in into the bedroom of a 12-year-old, he left a message in her computer saying: "Merci" ("Thank you" in French).
He took thousands of pictures of his crimes and kept the photos on his computer.
Crown Attorney Robert Morrison presented numerous pictures of Williams dressed in underwear and bras he stole, frequently masturbating while lying on the beds of his victims.
Some of the photos presented on the first day of his trial were published in several newspapers.
As some newspapers explained, although troubling, the photos were published because they capture the essence of the crimes of Williams and show the true nature of his crimes.
Ontario Superior Court Justice Robert F. Scott sentenced Williams on October 22, 2010 to two concurrent terms of life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years. | <object width="800" height="625"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/hzh3adTWZOg?fs=1&hl=nl_NL&rel=0&color1 =0x5d1719&color2=0xcd311b"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/hzh3adTWZOg?fs=1&hl=nl_NL&rel=0&color1 =0x5d1719&color2=0xcd311b" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="800" height="625"></embed></object> OPP Det. Sgt. Jim Smyth presents evidence to Col. Russell Williams in a videotaped interrogation Feb 7, 2010. The video was played during Williams' sentencing hearing in Belleville Oct. 20, 2010.
<object width="800" height="625"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Ah51vPzcVEM?fs=1&hl=nl_NL&rel=0&color1 =0x5d1719&color2=0xcd311b"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Ah51vPzcVEM?fs=1&hl=nl_NL&rel=0&color1 =0x5d1719&color2=0xcd311b" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="800" height="625"></embed></object> OPP Det. Sgt. Jim Smyth discusses evidence with Col. Russell Williams in a videotaped interrogation Feb 7, 2010. This is an excerpt of a two-hour, forty-minute video that was played during Williams' sentencing hearing in Belleville Oct. 20, 2010.
<object width="800" height="625"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/2mQA2yQFZ8o?fs=1&hl=nl_NL&rel=0&color1 =0x5d1719&color2=0xcd311b"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/2mQA2yQFZ8o?fs=1&hl=nl_NL&rel=0&color1 =0x5d1719&color2=0xcd311b" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="800" height="625"></embed></object> OPP Det. Sgt. Jim Smyth discusses evidence with Col. Russell Williams in a videotaped interrogation Feb 7, 2010. This is an excerpt of a two-hour, forty-minute video that was played during Williams' sentencing hearing in Belleville Oct. 20, 2010. |