Article 5T1HV Toronto police announce ‘suspect’ caught on video in murders of billionaires Barry and Honey Sherman

Toronto police announce ‘suspect’ caught on video in murders of billionaires Barry and Honey Sherman

by
Kevin Donovan - Chief Investigative Reporter
from on (#5T1HV)
_1_sherman_suspect.jpg

Toronto police want to know the identity of a suspect" walking near the Sherman home around the time of the murders of billionaire philanthropists Barry and Honey Sherman.

Police on Tuesday released a short video loop of the man walking near the couple's North York home. Police say he is between five-foot-six and five-foot-nine.

The video was recorded by a home security on the street sometime in the evening hours of Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2017, the night of the murders.

If you recognize yourself in the video please come forward," homicide Det. Sgt. Brandon Price told reporters.

Read more from Kevin Donovan: The inside story of how Toronto police zeroed in the Sherman murder suspect' with the odd gait

The person can be seen walking into a defined area near the Shermans home on Old Colony Road where there is no video coverage, and then leaves the same way. Police would not reveal the timing of the video.

Price asked anyone who recognizes the person to come forward. He also noted the person kicks up his right heel" as he walks.

Investigators have spent four years scouring video and used special software to identify many people caught on video that day, Price said. This is the only person they cannot identify, said.

He added that police are now classifying this person as a suspect."

Barry, 75, was the founder and owner of Apotex, Canada's generic drug giant. He and his wife Honey, 70, were committed philanthropists. Their bodies were discovered in the basement swimming pool room of their north Toronto home four years ago. Originally thought by police to be a murder-suicide, police eventually investigated their killings as a targeted double-homicide.

The statement and release of information by homicide detectives Tuesday was the first time in almost four years that Toronto police have publicly released information to the media (though through a court process and cross examination by a Toronto Star reporter police have released updates on the case).

The only other time police held a press conference to release information was on Jan. 26, 2018, six weeks after the bodies were discovered. The then-head of the Sherman probe, Det. Sgt. Susan Gomes, announced to the public that after an extensive review of materials they had concluded that the Shermans were a victim of a double-homicide.

Gomes said after having taken 127 witness statements, and reviewing video and other information, they had concluded we have sufficient evidence to describe this as a double-homicide investigation and that both Barry and Honey Sherman were targeted."

By the spring of 2018, the number of people interviewed had ballooned to 250. The Star has found, through its attempts to unseal search warrant material, that less than a dozen additional people have been interviewed. The case has over the years become what some investigators describe as a search warrant case." Police go to court to seek a search warrant or production order for something - a person's cell phone records or banking information as an example - and then once they receive that information they use it to request other data or files.

Read more on the Sherman investigation:

Barry and Honey Sherman: The first 48 hours are crucial in a homicide. The police acted like they were in no rush

Sherman's will divided his estate among Barry and Honey's four kids when they reach 35 years of age

Many lined up at the Bank of Barry' Sherman: Inside the $10 billion succession battle

Two years ago, police told the Star during this court process that they had a theory" of the case and an idea of what happened. Whether police still maintain that theory, they are not saying.

Det. Sgt. Brandon Price, who was on the original investigation, now leads it, following Gomes' departure from the homicide unit a year into the case.

Kevin Donovan can be reached at kdonovan@thestar.ca or 416-312-3503

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location https://www.thespec.com/rss/article?category=news&subcategory=local
Feed Title
Feed Link https://www.thespec.com/
Reply 0 comments