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Ontario man gets life in prison for 1983 killings of 2 Toronto women

An Ontario man, convicted in the killings of two women in Toronto that took place nearly four decades ago, was sentenced on Friday to life in prison with no chance of parole for 21 years.

Joseph George Sutherland, 62, of Moosonee, Ont., was sentenced in Ontario Superior Court in Toronto. He pleaded guilty in October 2023 to two counts of second-degree murder in the deaths of Susan Tice and Erin Gilmour in 1983.

Tice, 45, and Gilmour, 22, were both sexually assaulted and stabbed to death in their beds in August and December 1983. They lived just kilometres apart in the city core — Tice in the Bickford Park neighbourhood and Gilmour in a Yorkville apartment. The two women didn’t know each other. 

Gilmour was an aspiring fashion designer and the daughter of mining tycoon David Gilmour. Tice was a family therapist and mother of four teenagers.

Side by side black and white photographs. On the left, a 22 year old smiling woman with long hair. On the right, a 45 year old smiling woman with short hair.
Erin Gilmour, 22, left, and Susan Tice, 45, right, were both killed in their homes in 1983. DNA evidence shows that the same person was present at both crime scenes. (Submitted by Sean McCowan, Tice family)

Sutherland was arrested by provincial police in his home town in November 2022. His period of parole ineligibility begins at the time of his arrest. He is also required to submit a DNA sample to the authorities and cannot possess weapons.

Justice Maureen Forestell told the court that mitigating factors in the sentencing include the fact that Sutherland is a first-time offender, he pleaded guilty to the crimes, he has apologized for his actions and he has lived a “pro-social” life in the time since the murders.

But because of the “extreme gravity of these offences,” the sentence and period of parole ineligibility cannot be lower, she said.

“The two murders that Mr. Sutherland committed were profoundly serious,” she said.

“The deaths of Susan Tice and Erin Gilmour were not quick and they were not painless. Ms. Tice suffered numerous defensive injuries as she fought for her life. Ms. Gilmour was bound and gagged. They were killed in their homes, which should have been places of sanctuary,” she added.

“The victims were sexually assaulted. The impact of the violence has continued to be felt by the other victims in this case, the families and friends of Susan Tice and Erin Gilmour, over the past 40 years.”

Judge considered Sutherland’s history in sentence

When determining the sentence, Forestell said she took into account a Gladue report about Sutherland, who is Cree and a member of the Fort Albany First Nation.

Gladue reports present circumstances of a self-identified Indigenous accused’s life for a judge to consider while deciding on a sentence. These can include personal and community histories, and traumas such as colonialism and its ongoing impacts.

According to that report, Sutherland went to St. Anne’s Indian Residential School, where he was physically abused by a teacher.

“Courts must take judicial notice of such matters as the history of colonialism, displacement and residential schools and how that history continues to impact Indigenous communities. The impacts include lower educational achievement, higher rates of substance abuse, and suicide and higher levels of incarceration,” she said.

“Mr. Sutherland was both directly and indirectly negatively impacted by colonialism and by the residential school system.”

She said the residential school system weakened his family bonds, caused a loss of connection to his language and culture, and led to a loss of access to educational opportunities. She said he was also impacted by sexual abuse and alcoholism.

Toronto police released this image of homicide suspect Joseph George Sutherland which they say was taken in the 1980s.
Joseph George Sutherland is pictured above in the 1980s. (Toronto Police Service)

Sutherland told the author of the Gladue report, however, that he didn’t remember the first killing and only vaguely remembered the second killing. Forestell said she does not accept that assertion in part because he has said he went on a spirit quest to ask for forgiveness from his victims.

DNA technology led to breakthrough in case

The women’s murders went unsolved until a breakthrough was announced in 2021. Police credited advances in DNA technology in recent years with helping to find him.

Detectives were able to link the two killings using DNA technology in 2000, according to the Toronto Police Service, with investigators determining the same man killed both women.

In 2019, police began using a technique called “investigative genetic genealogy” to identify the suspect’s family group. The process involves cross-referencing DNA found at crime scenes with samples voluntarily submitted to services like 23andMe or Ancestry.ca and then uploaded to open-source databases.

Sutherland will be eligible for parole in 2043.

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