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Torture investigation expands

CALGARY — Calgary police say they are investigating whether the suspect arrested in a gruesome torture case that spans two Prairie provinces may have other alleged victims.

CALGARY — Calgary police say they are investigating whether the suspect arrested in a gruesome torture case that spans two Prairie provinces may have other alleged victims.

Det. Doug Crippen said Wednesday that other individuals have come forward, and he confirmed that there are currently “parallel investigations” looking into the actions of Dustin Paxton.

“I can’t get into the specifics of other parallel investigations. As we receive the information, we are following up the information aggressively to ensure that anybody who has encountered a crime is afforded the opportunity to have a bias-free investigation,” Crippen said at an afternoon news conference.

“At this point we are speaking with other individuals and we are encouraging if there are any other individuals who need to report a criminal act with regard to this matter that they come forward.”

Police say the 30-year-old Paxton had been living under an assumed name in Edmonton for the past four months before being taken into custody in that city late Tuesday.

Paxton is to make his first court appearance in Calgary today.

He faces charges that include aggravated assault and forcible confinement relating to his former roommate, Dustin LaFortune. The charges deal with crimes that are alleged to have occurred in both Calgary and Regina.

LaFortune was starved, burned and had parts of his tongue and lips cut off before being dumped at a hospital in Regina earlier this year.

“This case was in particular the worst investigation that I have entered into in my time as a police officer with the Calgary Police Service,” said Crippen, who travelled to Edmonton to interview Paxton.

“I can’t speculate on why this particular individual did what he is alleged to have done.”

Police in Regina and Calgary issued warrants for Paxton on Monday — more than four months after LaFortune was dumped at the hospital.

The 26-year-old weighed just 87 pounds, down from his usual weight of 245, when he was left there on April 16. His family has said that in addition to extensive physical injuries, he suffered brain trauma and amnesia.

LaFortune was reported missing in Calgary on April 12.

His family said he moved to Calgary from Winnipeg two years ago to work for a moving company and they lost contact with him in February.

Details about what might have happened during that time began to emerge after LaFortune was dumped at the hospital.

A landlord at a Regina apartment building said he rented a suite to LaFortune in mid-March and a man living below that suite said he regularly heard disturbing sounds coming from there. Officers raided the apartment as part of their probe.

Word of the arrest was also welcomed by LaFortune’s family and more than 48,000 supporters on a Facebook page dedicated to the case.

While police only recently publicly fingered Paxton as their suspect, LaFortune’s family has been pointing to him for months, using the Internet to make its case.

His mother, Renee LaFortune, thanked police and said: “Dustin is safe at last” and referred to Crippen as “a hero.”

“So good to see the prompt arrest after the long-awaited arrest warrant,” wrote another woman.

Regina police spokeswoman Elizabeth Popowich said the case has drawn a lot of attention.

“We now have the start of the judicial process ahead of us and that’s a good thing. It helps bring some resolution to the victim and the victim’s family,” said Popowich.

“I spoke with one of our investigators this morning and he said that the family is obviously quite relieved and ... had learned also from the family of the victim, that the victim himself is quite relieved to hear the news.”

Investigators have said that there were challenges in the investigation, including that LaFortune initially couldn’t give officers a statement because of his condition. They also said they needed the four months to gather evidence and build a case.

An Edmonton couple who had been renting a room to Paxton at their home said they were shocked to learn of the charges.

Paxton told them he had moved from Vancouver for work and that his name was Jon Roach.

“He was very helpful around the house,” said Rick Guyl. “Mowed all the lawns for me. Of course, I gave him some money for it off his rent.”

Guyl said at one point he had intended to hire a maid to help his wife, who had recently had surgery, but Paxton volunteered to help out instead.

However, Guyl also said not everything seemed right about their quiet tenant.

“We kind of thought that his name was a little suspect,” he said. “J.P. was the nickname that he used — it didn’t jive.”