What secrets did Calgary serial killer Gary Srery take to the grave?

Over the course of a year in the late 1970s, Calgarians woke up to horrifying headlines splashed across newspaper front pages.

In just over 12 months, four young women’s lives were extinguished under mysterious circumstances.

FriendsEva Dvorak and Patsy McQueen, both 14, were found dead on the side of the Trans-Canada highway west of Calgary on Feb. 15, 1976. The body of Melissa Rehorek, 20, was found in a ditch on a quiet gravel road 22 km west of the city seven months later.

And in February of 1977, the body of Barbara MacLean, 19, was discovered by a dog walker just outside the city’s northeast quadrant.

For years, despite evidence, interviews and autopsies, the explanations into all four deaths were scant.

The cause of death for McQueen and Dvorak, who had been sent home the day they died after being caught drinking at their junior high school, was listed as undetermined. Autopsies revealed the pair had drugs and alcohol in their systems when they died, but their deaths were never ruled as murder.

Rehorek and MacLean’s deaths showed similarities, leading investigators to believe they might have been victims of a single killer, but a suspect was never identified.

For decades, the families and friend of each young woman waited for more information, for the cold cases to run hot. As the years ticked by, hope diminished.

Almost half a century later, in 2024, the RCMP released abombshell press release.

“American believed to be serial killer behind deaths of 4 young Calgarians,” readGlobal News’ headlineon May 17, 2024, as police announced a break in not one, but all four cases.

At a news conference in Edmonton, police announced that all four young women were victims of a serial killer by the name ofGary Srery— an American citizen living in Canada illegally at the time of the homicides.

Police said ahead of each of the four victims’ deaths, they had been walking in the evening. All four died of asphyxiation and their bodies were left outside of Calgary’s city limits. In each case, seminal fluid was found on the victims but police noted that at the time of their deaths there was no way to test for a DNA profile of a suspect.

Now, Global’s true crime offering,Crime Beat, is looking back on the case, with exclusive interviews from the detectives who helped link the crimes, never-before-heard details from one of the victim’s sisters and a jaw-dropping interview with the serial killer’s own son, who provides insight into how his father became a serial killer — and the reasons he believes his dad is responsible for the death of another young Alberta woman.

Keep reading to learn more about Srery, how advances in forensic technology helped link the Calgary murders and why investigators think he may be connected to additional murders and sexual assaults.

Gary Allen Srery was born in Illinois in 1942, the first of three siblings, and moved with his family to California in the mid-1950s.

While little is known about his formative years, by the 1960s he began to rack up an extensive rap sheet, particularly for violent and sexual offences, starting with a forcible rape conviction in 1965.

He faced additional charges of kidnapping, sexual perversion and burglary around that time, leading to the State of California to classify him as a “mentally disordered sex offender,” and he was committed to a mental health facility.

In and out of incarceration, the next few years saw Srery rack up additional charges, including rape, drug possession, kidnapping and sodomy.

In 1974, Srery attacked a female hitchhiker in the San Fernando Valley in California, and, attempting to escape the Los Angeles rape charge, he crossed into Canada illegally.

He was a bit of a chameleon, ever-changing his appearance, his vehicles and his aliases. Once in Canada he became an under-the-table drifter, working as a salesman or in kitchens in Southern Alberta and B.C., and staying off the radar of police. He often used the names “Willy Blackman” and “Rex Long.”

Srery’s deception worked. It wasn’t until his 1998 arrest in New Westminster, B.C., for a violent sexual assault, that his crimes north of the border caught up with him. Following a five-year sentence in Canadian prison, he was deported back to the U.S. in 2003.

With Srery back in the U.S., investigators continued to pick away at the cold cases.

In 2003, taking advantage of advancements in forensic technology, evidence from Rehorek and MacLean’s crime scenes were sent in for DNA testing and confirmed what police suspected all along — seminal DNA found on their clothing matched a single, unknown offender.

It was almost another 20 years, in the fall of 2022, when Dvorak’s sister, Anita Vukovich-Kohut, learned that the case of the two junior high students had been reopened after she called police to check in on the case.

RCMP toldCrime Beatthat two months before receiving Vukovich-Kohut’s call, they had received a tip that spurred further investigation: an inmate had found McQueen’s name in the notes of another inmate.

While the tip turned out to be a dead end, the investigator handling the case realized there were exhibits in the McQueen and Dvorak case that hadn’t been tested using new DNA technology.

While waiting for the results of the testing to come back, and inspired by the capture of theGolden State Killerusing investigative genetic genealogy (IGG), police, in partnership with the RCMP, reopened the cases of Rehorek and MacLean.

When they uploaded the DNA samples from the cases into the genetic genealogy databank, it spit back a family tree of more than 6,400 people related to the unknown offender, dating back to the early 1700s.

Within months, they narrowed down their search to a small group of brothers. One of the siblings, Gary Srery, had already made headlines about being a serial rapist, giving investigators their No. 1 suspect.

Meanwhile, police were able to link Srery to the Calgary area during the time of the four murders, and reviewed the cases of eight other women who survived attacks by Srery, painting a picture of how the suspected serial killer moved and operated.

When the DNA results came back, police were finally able to confirm that Srery had violently raped and murdered all four young women.

While the families of each Calgary victim say they were relieved to finally have some closure, Srery was long dead, having died from natural causes in an Idaho prison in 2011 while serving a life sentence for another violent rape.

Investigators say he’s likely responsible for other unsolved murders, but his death means there’s a good chance Srery took secrets of other committed crimes to the grave.

Even his son, Richard, believes there are other crimes at the hands of his dad that are waiting to be uncovered.

“He is one of the most charismatic, convincing, intellectual people I have ever actually ever encountered,” he toldCrime Beatin an exclusive interview, explaining he believes his dad used his smarts and social skills to prey on his victims.

“I can’t help thinking, even to this day, how many do we not know about?”

One of the unsolved cases he believes is connected to his dad, said Richard, is the mysterious 1981kidnapping and murderof a 15-year-old girl in rural Alberta.

Revealing a letter written to him by his father from prison, Richard said the note mentioned several aliases Srery had used in the past, including the name “Bill Christensen.”

Bill Christensen was also the name used by a man in Standard, Alta., 70 km north of Calgary, who called up an unsuspecting teenager by the name of Kelly Cook,luring her to her deathunder the guise of a babysitting job.

Two months later, Cook’s body was found in the Chin Lake Reservoir, east of Lethbridge, tied up with ropes and anchored by concrete blocks.

Years later, anticipating a visit from RCMP to his home in the U.S. to talk about cases linked to his father, Richard said he had stumbled across Cook’s case in anotherCrime Beatepisode:The Case of Kelly Cook: The Backup Babysitter.

“I was convinced from watching it, this is him, this is the (case) they’re going to talk to me about,” he said. “He lived there, the aliases…everything about it just adds up.”

Surprised when Cook’s case didn’t come up in their conversation, Richard said he brought it up with the investigators, who quickly shot him down, saying they didn’t have a connection between the case and his dad.

The RCMP claims there’s no mention of the alias Bill Christensen in Srery’s file, nor evidence that connects him to Cook’s death.

Crime Beatairs its penultimate episode of the season at 10 p.m. ET on Global, examining a series of serial killings in Calgary in the 1970s and how the man responsible, Gary Srery, might have had more victims. Check your local listings for airtimes. Episodes appear streaming and on the StackTV app the following day.

Global News and Global TV are both properties of Corus Entertainment.

More evacuation orders to be lifted in parts of northwestern Manitoba after fires

Residents of Flin Flon will be able to start coming home next week as officials in the northwestern Manitoba city lift its mandatory evacuation order.

A social media post from the city says the order is expected to be lifted at 9 a.m. on June 25, exactly one month after the city’s 5,000 residents were forced out by a massive wildfire.

Deputy Mayor Alison Dallas-Funk says most critical services and businesses, including power, gas and health care, will be ready to go starting Sunday.

She says barring further fire activity, city council will meet Monday to officially rescind the evacuation order and secure transportation for people to come home.

Manitoba’s wildfire service has said crews have made progress in combating the 3,700-square-kilometre fire near Flin Flon, but weather has hindered their efforts.

The province has been experiencing what Premier Wab Kinew has described as its worst fire season in recent memory, forcing upwards of 21,000 people to flee.

Ontario teacher charged with assault, forcible confinement after 4 students kept in room

Peel Regional Police say a teacher is facing charges after four students were allegedly “forcibly confined” in a room at a Mississauga, Ont. school.

Police said an investigation was launched in May and the incident is alleged to have occurred during the current school year. The reported incident occurred at a public school in the area of Atwater Avenue and Cawthra Road.

Investigators allege the teacher “physically moved” four students into a room and forcibly confined them, preventing them from leaving.”

A 36-year-old man is facing four counts of assault and four counts of forcible confinement.

Police said the accused was released with conditions and has another court appearance at a later date.

The force also added that the Peel District School Board has confirmed the teacher is currently suspended pending the outcome of the court process.

“Given the nature of the incident and the vulnerability of those involved, investigators are concerned there may be additional victims,” police said. “Anyone with information, or who believes they or someone they know may have been affected, is urged to contact police.”

Unifor asks feds to reject DHL’s request for strike intervention

Unifor sent a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney and cabinet ministers this week decrying a request from package companyDHLto intervene in a strike.

That request was made by DHL in a letter last week that was shared on the union’s website.

The letter said the change that takes effect on June 20 to federal labour law banning replacement workers duringstrikesthreatens to “severely undermine” DHL’s operational capabilities.

It said the cessation of its operations would lead to the loss of around 2,800 jobs and asks that the government intervene to allow DHL Express to continue operating while it negotiates with the union.

The letter said the company saw “similar interventions” during the ongoing strike at Canada Post and that it thinks such action is warranted in its case given that it provides “essential logistics services to Canadians.”

Unifor national president Lana Payne argued in the letter to Carney that DHL locked out its workers and forced members to respond with strike action.

She said the company is asking for a “free pass” to avoid having to comply with anti-scab legislation which sets a “dangerous precedent.”

She said the use of “scabs” leads to longer disputes, contributes to higher conflict at picket lines, jeopardizes workplace safety and “removes the employer incentive to negotiate and settle fair contracts.”

With the two sides at an impasse, DHL Express Canada has said it will shut down operations across the country.

DHL said it will halt parcel deliveries starting June 20, the day federal legislation banning replacement workers takes full effect.

The upcoming shutdown adds to the labour turmoil in the parcel market, as Canada Post remains at loggerheads with 55,000 workers amid strained negotiations and an overtime ban imposed by the union last month.

Unifor represents over 2,000 DHL truck drivers, couriers and warehouse and call centre employees across Canada.

— With files from Christopher Reynolds

ANALYSIS: Stanley Cup winners a masterclass in leadership

Tuesday night, theFlorida Panthersgave us all a masterclass in leadership.

What was amazing to watch and listen to after the game was every single member of the Panthers finding six different ways to say the same thing. The commitment to win. The commitment to each other. It was as much about the emotional as it was about strategy.

To a man, they spoke of the respect for each and every teammate, whether they played or not. It wasn’t about analytics or statistics, it was about appreciation for each other. It was, in a word, about culture. There was no better example of that culture than the decision by the leadership group to present the Cup to all the first-time winners before the back-to-back champions carried the trophy.

With all the talk in recent weeks about how Florida has such an advantage in luring players to play in the Sunshine State, it is the culture — not the taxes, not the weather — that the winners celebrated. It wasn’t about money. It was about people. Taxes don’t create culture. People create culture.

By the way, that’s the type of culture that we see now in Winnipeg — the culture that helped theJetswin the Presidents’ Trophy.

In so many ways, it’s why hockey is the ultimate team sport. Stars rarely play more than a third of the game, and role players can make a difference in a team’s success. The Panthers were just that much better than Edmonton.

What always amazes me is the price players pay to win the Stanley Cup. Matthew Tkachuk had an adductor torn off the bone and a sports hernia, Aleksander Barkov had his hand cut open in Game 1 and played the whole series with the palm of his hand stitched up, and Sam Reinhart, who scored four times in the last game, had a Grade 2 MCL strain that would have put most players out for eight weeks. He missed two games in the third round.

Playing through pain, paying the price. It is all part of the story of winning.

So now, just when we thought the season was over, it’s on to the draft, and free agency, where the only injuries to report will be the bruised wallets of the owners.

Chris Brown pleads not guilty to assault charge in U.K.

Chris Brownpleaded not guilty Friday to a charge related to the serious beating of a music producer with a bottle in a London nightclub in 2023.

Brown, 36, wore a blue suit, a white shirt and black-rimmed glasses during his arraignment in London’s Southwark Crown Court on one count of attempting to unlawfully and maliciously cause grievous bodily harm with intent.

When asked how he pleaded to the grievous bodily harm count, Brown said, “Not guilty, ma’am.”

Brown’s friend and fellow musician Omololu Akinlolu, 39, who performs under the name Hoody Baby, pleaded not guilty to the same charge.

Brown is accused of launching an “unprovoked attack” on producer Amadou “Abe” Diaw at the Tape nightclub in London in February 2023 while he was on tour.

Prosecutor Hannah Nicholls said Brown struck Diaw several times with a tequila bottle and then punched and kicked him.

The attack was caught on surveillance camera in front of a club full of people, prosecutors said.

Brown was originally charged with a single count of grievous bodily harmafter his arrest in May, but prosecutors subsequently brought an indictment adding two counts: assault causing actual bodily harm and having an offensive weapon, a bottle.

He did not enter pleas on the additional counts on Friday and was ordered to return to court on July 11 to face those charges after wrapping up the European leg of his world tour. His trial was scheduled for Oct. 26, 2026.

A post shared by BROWN (@chrisbrownofficial)

TheRun Itsingerwas released last month on US$6.7-million bail,which allowed him to start his Breezy Bowl XX tour earlier this month.

Judge Tony Baumgartner said the 36-year-old singer could continue his tour, including several stops in the U.K., but would have to pay the bail to guarantee his appearance in court. Brown could be asked to forfeit the money if he breaches bail conditions.

Brown’s bail conditions include surrendering his passport if he is not travelling on tour, living at a specific address known to the court, not contacting Diaw, not visiting the Tape nightclub where the incident took place and not applying for international travel documents.

Following his release after spending almost one week in jail, Brown posted on Instagram: “Cook, remain humble.”

A post shared by BROWN (@chrisbrownofficial)

Brown is currently touring the U.K., playing in London with subsequent shows in Ireland, Scotland, France and Portugal. He returns to North America at the end of July to play Miami, before moving across the U.S. with a two-night stop in Toronto along the way.

—With files from The Associated Press

Brampton mayor ‘cautiously optimistic’ about Bishnoi gang terrorist designation

Brampton MayorPatrick Brownsays he’s “cautiously optimistic” about the chances ofIndia’sLawrence Bishnoi gang being designated as a terrorist group after meeting with the public safety minister Wednesday night.

Brown says that he and Peel region police officials met with Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree in Ottawa to discuss the “scourge” of extortion and murders linked to the gang.

RCMP have alleged Indian diplomats shared information about Sikh separatists in Canada with the Indian government and that top Indian officials then passed the information to the Bishnoi gang.

Brown says that the gang has become more brazen in Brampton and local police have spotted vehicles with Bishnoi-affiliated decals.

Anandasangaree said Wednesday morning that national security officials “continuously” review whether criminal organizations meet the legal threshold to be named as a terrorist group.

BC Premier David Eby sent a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney earlier this week asking that the Bishnoi gang be designated as a terrorist organization, as the government did with seven other transnational criminal organizations earlier this year.

Alberta rock slide: Search for hikers to resume after deadly Banff National Park incident

One day after arock slideinBanff National Parkkilled a person and injured three others, rescue crews are set to resume search efforts for other potential victims north of Lake Louise, Alta., on Friday.

“Parks Canada wardens and RCMP remained on site overnight,” read a joint statement issued byParks Canadaand the RCMP on Friday morning. “Parks Canada visitor safety teams will continue working today with support from Canada Task Force Two (CAN-TF2), a national disaster response team.

“CAN-TF2 is conducting infrared flights, through their partners in the Calgary Police Service, in a continued effort to complete a thorough assessment.”

The statement added that a geotechnical engineer will also conduct a slope stability assessment.

Helicopters were seen flying over the area late Thursday to look for potential missing hikers.

Emergency crews were first called to an area near Bow Glacier Falls at about 1:30 p.m. on Thursday. The site of the slide is located about 37 kilometres north of Lake Louise along the Icefields Parkway.

Two victims of the slide were airlifted to hospitals, while another was taken to hospital by ground ambulance. First responders found one person already dead at the scene. Global News has learned that the person was Jutta Hinrichs.

Hinrichs’ friends told Global News she had just returned to Canada from Peru last Friday. They said she was an accomplished occupational therapist who had “a beautiful, caring soul with a huge smile and love of people and nature.”

Officials have said anyone who has not been able to account for loved ones believed to be in the area of the slide should contact Parks Canada.

“Bow Lake remains closed to all visitors,” officials said Friday, noting that a no-fly zone remains in place in the area to ensure public safety and to allow for emergency operations.

“Alpine Club of Canada guests staying at Bow Hut are safe. Visitors staying at Bow Hut will be able to exit on schedule via the usual route, which is unaffected and safe to travel. ”

The Icefields Parkway remains open but officials warned that there could be intermittent traffic disruptions in the area.

Ontario assault deemed intimate partner violence by police

A Wasaga Beach man is facing multiple charges related to an assault deemedintimate partner violenceby Ontario Provincial Police.

On Monday, officers from the Collingwood and The Blue Mountains provincial police detachment responded to a disturbance at a location in Collingwood.

What started as a verbal dispute had escalated into a case of intimate partner violence, police say.

Officers say a male suspect assaulted a female, damaged her personal property, and was found in possession of a spring-assisted knife with a brass knuckle handle.

During the arrest, police say the individual resisted officers and damaged a police cruiser.

Officers allege the individual then uttered threats against an officer.

The man was then found to be in breach of existing prohibition orders and undertakings, police say.

A 35-year-old man from Wasaga Beach was arrested and charged with assault, uttering threats, mischief, unauthorized possession of a firearm, and failure to comply with a release order, among other charges.

The accused was held in custody pending a bail hearing at the Ontario court of justice in Barrie on Tuesday.

Police say no further details will be released to protect the victim and the integrity of the court process.

Winnipeg hockey hero Toews agrees to one-year deal with hometown Jets

One of Winnipeg’s most-decorated professional athletes is coming home.

The Winnipeg Jets announced Friday morning that Jonathan Toews is returning to his hometown next NHL season and suiting up for the Jets on a one-year contract.

Toews, 37, who grew up in St. Vital, is known throughout the hockey world for his impeccable resume — which includes three Stanley Cups in five years as captain of the Chicago Blackhawks and international acclaim for Canada, earning two Olympic gold medals, a World Championship gold, World Cup of Hockey gold and two World Junior gold medals.

His trophy case includes Conn Smythe, Selke and Mark Messier Leadership awards.

“We are excited to add a proven winner like Jonathan Toews to the Winnipeg Jets,” general manager Kevin Cheveldayoff said.

“It will be a unique opportunity for Jonathan to play for his hometown team. His talent, drive and experience will be a great complement to our club. We will withhold further comment until July 1.”

Health issues caused Toews to step back from his 16-season career with the Blackhawks, with ailments including chronic inflammatory response syndrome and long COVID keeping him off the ice, although he had been actively working toward an NHL comeback in recent years.

“I’m grateful to be making my return to the NHL with the Winnipeg Jets,” he said.

“It’s very special to come home and play in front of my family and friends in Manitoba. The Jets have been on the rise over the last few seasons, and I’m eager to join the group and help however I can.”