cover of episode Gone in an instant - The Hunt for Talal Amer Part 1 | 14

Gone in an instant - The Hunt for Talal Amer Part 1 | 14

2024/12/10
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Crime Beat

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Constable Robert Tell
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Detective Regan Hossack
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Nancy Hixt
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Tracy Tong
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@Tracy Tong : 我正在分享一起案件,希望大家能留意一名因谋杀和重伤他人而被通缉的男子塔拉尔·阿梅尔,他是加拿大头号通缉犯之一。 @Nancy Hixt : 我将讲述安吉拉·麦肯齐的故事,她是一位五位孩子的母亲,她的生命被无情地夺走,以及对责任人的追捕。 @Sylvia : 安吉拉从小就是一个让人操心的孩子,但她也是我的好朋友和伙伴。她总是无条件地爱着别人,总是把别人的需求放在自己之前。我们每天都联系,孩子们经常来我家吃饭。 @Jeff Poirier : 我和安吉拉在她的父母的生意中相识,后来她结婚生子,成为单亲妈妈。我们重新联系并订婚,但我们的婚礼计划永远无法实现了。那天晚上,安吉拉离开去见朋友,那是我们最后一次通话。我发现安吉拉出车祸后,不得不告诉她的母亲和孩子们这个噩耗。安吉拉去世后,我和她的母亲一起抚养她的五个孩子。 @Detective Regan Hossack : 我们接到报告,称一辆灰色轿车和一辆红色皮卡车驾驶行为异常,随后发生枪击事件。红色皮卡车高速逃逸,并导致一起致命车祸。 @Constable Robert Tell : 通过对红色皮卡车的车载数据分析,我确定了事故发生时的车速以及驾驶员的行为。红色皮卡车在撞击前五秒钟的速度超过150公里/小时,是限速的三倍多。驾驶员在撞击前一秒钟才踩刹车,但为时已晚。

Deep Dive

Chapters
This chapter recounts the life of Angela McKenzie, a loving mother of five who was tragically killed in a hit-and-run. It details her close relationships with her family and fiancé, Jeff Poirier, and her active role in her community. The chapter ends with the sudden and unexpected end of her whirlwind romance with Jeff.
  • Angela McKenzie was a mother of five.
  • She was engaged to Jeff Poirier.
  • She was killed in a hit-and-run accident on May 10th, 2022.

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Hey, it's Nancy. Before we begin today, I just wanted to let you know that you can listen to Crime Beat early and ad-free on Amazon Music, included with Prime.

Coming to ABC and Hulu. Amanda Riley was a mother, wife, speaker at her church. And then she got diagnosed with cancer. A beloved young Christian woman fighting a battle undeserved. We thought she was God's gift, but she was a liar. Why would somebody fake cancer? From the number one smash hit pod.

It was only a matter of time until Amanda's whole world came tumbling down. You're not going to believe this. Scamanda. New episodes Thursday nights on ABC and stream on Hulu. Hey, it's Nancy Hixt, reporter and host of Crime Beat. I hope you're enjoying Crime Beat Most Wanted. I'm working on so many intriguing stories, including a case that was a true whodunit that took place in the popular resort town of Banff.

I'll share how the case went cold despite tireless efforts to track the killer. This story, and so many others, will be available starting mid-February of 2025. I hope you'll join me then for a brand new season of Crime Beat. A listener's note. The following episode contains coarse language, adult themes, and content of a violent and disturbing nature, and may not be suitable for everyone. Listener discretion is advised.

I'm Tracy Tong and this is Crime Beat Most Wanted, a podcast that takes you inside open investigations of serious crimes in the hopes your tips lead police to justice. Today I'm sharing a case so you can be on the lookout for a man wanted for killing one person and badly injuring another. Talal Amer is one of Canada's most wanted.

After a fatal collision, he allegedly ran away from the scene, evading police and the criminal trial he faces. Here now is Nancy Hixt. On a cool spring evening in May of 2022, Calgary families in the quiet community of Radisson Heights were busy getting ready for bed. But about an hour before midnight, a violent and chaotic sequence of events unfolded.

A gray car and a red pickup truck were reported to be driving erratically when shots rang out. The driver of the car was hit by a bullet. The red truck took off at speeds surpassing 150 kilometers an hour, more than three times the speed limit. Seconds later, a deadly crash. He took this person away who is...

who was loved by so, so many people. Hug your loved ones, man. Make sure they know that you love them. Bloody hell, you never know if tomorrow's going to be there. I'm Nancy Hixt, a senior crime reporter for Global News. Today on Crime Beat, I share the story of Angela McKenzie, a mother of five whose life was senselessly taken and the hunt for the man responsible. This is Gone in an Instant.

From the moment Angela McKenzie was born, she loved unconditionally, always putting others' needs before her own. Her mother, Sylvia, said they were best friends. What Angela was like? She was my partner. She did everything with me. Angela's parents immigrated from Germany in the early 70s and owned and operated popular paintball and laser tag businesses in Calgary.

As she grew up, she kept her parents on their toes. A handful, yeah. Yeah, she came into Laser Tag one time. I said, can you come up and help me with the Laser Tag? And she said, yeah, right away. And she came up and she had this clean, green Kool-Aid here with still some Kool-Aid running in town.

Angela was in her 20s when she first met Jeff Poirier. So I was, I want to say 20 years old and was looking through the paper and found a wanted ad for, you know, somebody to come work. And it said for a paintball company, 20 years old. Hey, why not? Let's go try it out. Showed up and the boss man gave me an interview and, you know, did all the all the normal stuff.

And by the end of it, he looked at me and says, you know, you seem like a great fit for us. But on one condition, I'll hire you. You have to stay away from my daughter. So I did what the man asked. Jeff worked for the family for more than a decade. In the meantime, Angela got married and became a mother. She had five children, two sons and three daughters, including a set of twins.

I knew every one of the kids from the day they were born because the father I actually was friends with as well because he worked at paintball with me and Ang. And then boss man got sick and basically everything started to close down because just couldn't manage to do it properly, right? And we all lost contact for a while. As she grieved the loss of her father, Angela's focus became her children. They were everything for her.

She was doing great. She was a mom. She made sure everything was right. She was doing volunteers at school. She was volunteering with that school and going to this. And she had everything lined up just perfectly. Her mother, Sylvia, became affectionately known as Alma, which is German for grandmother. Oh, we talked every day. Yeah.

The kids would sometimes phone me up in the afternoon and say, "Can mom bring us up to your house today?" And I said, "Well, I get home at five." "Well, okay, we start supper." So they're in my house already starting supper. Before I even get home, this is how we, how close we were.

Saturday night was a game night, you know, like we played cards, we played board games, you know, like we had supper, we ate junk food, you know, like we had fun. Angela became a single mother when she separated from her husband. He later passed away. She worked and volunteered at her church and the kids' school.

And then, Angela found love again when she reconnected with an old family friend, Jeff Poirier. I still periodically talk to Oma, Sylvia, because I do mechanics. So she'd call me if she had a car problem and I'd go fix her car. Well, I had just fixed her car probably a week before Ange's van broke down.

And she called her mom, said that, you know, the van's broken down. What do I do? And Sylvia said, well, you're close to Jeff's house. Give him a call. So that's what she did. She called me up and as soon as I answered the phone, I heard her voice and she said, how are you? You know, the basics. And then, do you know who you're talking to? And I says, of course I do. I never forget this voice.

Jeff said it all happened very quickly, and soon, they were engaged.

That was more of a random, like there was never a ring or anything, you know, transpired. She got my initials tattooed on her ring finger. And it was just one of those things where we were talking about it one day, you know, about where the future might lead us and so on and so forth. And I just basically, you know, nonchalantly looked at her and says, so if I was to ask you to marry me, what would you say? And she's like, I'd say yes. I'll take that as my answer.

And that was pretty much how it went. There was no official like down on the one knee or anything like that. It was like, all right, that's what we're doing. You know, you're now my fiance and we're going to work it out and we'll figure it out. We'll get the wedding together. But Jeff and Angela never got a chance to plan their wedding. ♪

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After Dark, Myths, Misdeeds and the Paranormal is a podcast that delves into the dark side of history. Expect murder and conspiracy, ghosts and witches.

I'm Anthony Delaney. And I'm Maddy Pelling. We're historians and the hosts of After Dark from History Hit, where every Monday and Thursday we enter the shadows of the past. Discover the secrets of the darker side of history on After Dark from History Hit, wherever you get your podcasts.

Without warning, their whirlwind romance came to a devastating and abrupt end on May 10th, 2022. That night, the kids had stayed at home and me and Ange were just out with some friends of ours and we were going to go to dinner, but I had a really wicked migraine. And so I just went back to my mom and dad's to sit down on the couch and relax and take some pain meds.

She left me there about 11 o'clock. You know, I was laying on the couch with a cold cloth on my head and she said, I love you. I said, I love you. And she walked up the stairs and that was the last time I seen her. Angela met up with some friends, then started her drive home to her five kids.

Unbeknownst to her, danger was headed in her direction. We received reports of kind of two erratic drivers on 36th Street. And then specifically that a red truck seemed to be chasing a smaller sedan type vehicle. That's Calgary Police Homicide Detective Regan Hossack. She said moments later, shots were fired. ♪♪

Bullets pierced through the walls of nearby homes. Miraculously, no occupants were hit, but bullet holes marked the close call. So both vehicles are traveling southbound on 36th Street from Memorial Drive. And at some point, the red truck is able to pull up next to the gray sedan. The occupant of that truck shoots at the gray sedan and then flees that shooting.

36th Street is a main thoroughfare that runs through the east side of Calgary and passes through both industrial and residential areas of the city. The driver of the grey car was hit. He lost control and hit another moving vehicle from behind. The red truck took off at high speeds. What happened next was captured by several surveillance cameras in the area.

In the footage, you see Angela driving her van northbound on 36th Street. As she turned left to go west, the red truck sped through the intersection. Angela's van was violently struck. The van was hit on the passenger side and was sent reeling across to the southwest corner of the intersection onto the sidewalk.

Police and EMS arrived within minutes, but it was too late. Angela McKenzie died at the scene. Her fiancé, Jeff, was still nursing a migraine at his parents' home when he realized he hadn't heard from Angela. She always messaged me to tell me when she got home, right? Even if it was a quick 30-second, "I'm home. Good night. Love you." Whatever, right?

Which was very rare that it was that short. But yeah, I didn't get that text. She's not answering her phone. Normally she would answer her phone or send a text or whatever, right? Jeff went to look for her. He retraced Angela's route home from his parents' place. Then, about three kilometers away... That's when I seen all the police lights on the intersection.

and I couldn't go up 17th. So I went down onto one of the back roads and then came around the circumference of the intersection. And as I was crossing 36th, a block and a half down, is I noticed her van sitting in front of the bank. Found the closest officer that was standing there, and I asked him, I says, "Where is the woman that was driving that van?"

And he says, "How do you know it's a woman?" I says, "Because that's my fiance's van. I know it's a woman. Where is she?" And that's when he informed me that she didn't make it past the scene. I knew that I was going to have to be the one that was going to tell Sylvia. I couldn't let a police officer do that. So I tried to get whatever information I could. That way I could relay whatever information I was able to when I told Oma. So I was there for a bit. I think

I don't know, a couple hours maybe. And then once I had calmed down enough, I got in my car and I drove over to Sylvia's place and I knocked on the door. And that was probably one of the hardest things I've ever had to do, other than telling the kids. That morning, Jeff and Oma Sylvia gathered Angela's five children on the couch to tell them what happened. From that point on, me and Oma took a crash course in co-parenting and parenting.

You know, just started figuring out what we were going to do and how we were going to do it. And you know, and I think even still to this day, every day is different. And we don't know what each day is going to hold, but neither one of us are giving up. And I know for a fact we're going to do our damnedest, you know, to give those kids what they still need and what they want.

Hi, everyone. I'm investigative journalist and park enthusiast Delia D'Ambra. And every week on my podcast, Park Predators, I take you into the heart of our world's most stunning locations to uncover what sinister crimes have unfolded in these serene settings. From unsolved murders to chilling disappearances, each of these places has a different story.

Each Tuesday, we dive deep into the details of cases that will leave you knowing sometimes the most beautiful places hide the darkest secrets. Listen to Park Predators now wherever you listen to podcasts.

When a body is discovered 10 miles out to sea, it sparks a mind-blowing police investigation. There's a man living in this address in the name of deceased. He's one of the most wanted men in the world. This isn't really happening. Officers finding large sums of money. It's a tale of murder, skullduggery and international intrigue. So who really is he?

I'm Sam Mullins, and this is Sea of Lies from CBC's Uncover, available now. A few miles from the glass spires of midtown Atlanta lies the South River Forest. In 2021 and 2022, the woods became a home to activists from all over the country who gathered to stop the nearby construction of a massive new police training facility, nicknamed Cop City. ♪

At approximately 9 o'clock this morning, as law enforcement was moving through various sectors of the property, an individual, without warning, shot a Georgia State Patrol trooper.

This is We Came to the Forest, a story about resistance. The abolitionist mission isn't done until every prison is empty and shut down. Love and fellowship. It was probably the happiest of everybody in my life. And the lengths we'll go to protect the things we hold closest to our hearts. Follow We Came to the Forest on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge all episodes of We Came to the Forest early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery+.

Meanwhile, police from several units arrived at the scene. Originally, the Calgary Police Guns and Gangs Unit took charge of the investigation, given the shooting that preceded the devastating crash.

They also brought in the Calgary Police Collision Reconstruction Team and Constable Robert Tell. My job is to attend either fatal or very serious collisions and to look at the physical evidence at the scene. I don't talk to witnesses, I don't listen to what the drivers say. My job is purely to determine by what I can see on the roadway, what I can see on the vehicles and any information that I can get from those vehicles as to what happened

Constable Tell told me on newer vehicles, they can find out a lot of information from the airbag module. As you're driving down the road day in, day out, the airbag control module in your car is waiting for you to get involved in a crash. That's its only purpose, right? So it's constantly recording information, but it only buffers a certain amount of information. When a crash happens, it locks information from the previous five seconds to that deployment event.

So you get five seconds of information and that five seconds can include vehicle speed, whether the brake switch is on, the service brake, steering angle, yaw rate, the accelerator position. And there's different vehicle manufacturers have different types of information they record. But generally we get speed, whether the brakes are on or off and steering and that types of stuff.

In this case, police got a warrant to download data from the red truck. I was able to determine that at five seconds prior to the crash, the Chevy Silverado was traveling at 155 kilometers an hour. Now, it was increasing its speed at that point because the accelerator pedal was at 99%, which is almost full to the floor, right? So

The speed did increase and actually increased to 157 kilometers an hour at one time. And then at that point, which I think was about three seconds prior to the collision, the accelerator came off and at one and a half seconds the brake went on. For reference, the speed limit on 36th Street is 50 kilometers an hour,

That means the red truck was going more than three times the posted limit at the moment of impact. Constable Tell said given the high speed of the red truck, Angela McKenzie wouldn't have known her life was in danger when she entered the intersection. She felt that she had sufficient time to clear the intersection, but the truck was traveling at such a high rate of speed that it closed the distance

The officer said the speed would also impact the red pickup truck's ability to stop. At the point when the brake pedal was depressed, the vehicle speed had dropped to 132 kilometers an hour. But the vehicle is traveling at 37 meters per second at that point. And if you think a basketball court is about 29 meters long, so the car is traveling in one second more than a whole basketball court. So...

We speak a lot in collision terms about perception reaction times. So the human body is not an autonomous machine, we're not robotic. We cannot instantly see something and then apply the brake. It takes our brain time to go, "Something happens, what do I do? Now I need to do something about it." So there's what we call perception reaction time. So at one and a half seconds prior to the impact,

I can say that at that point, I believe the driver of that vehicle had perceived that there was a problem and his decision to deal with that was to put his foot on the foot brake. But of course, at that speed, he's unable to bring that vehicle to a stop in that distance. The evidence they gathered changed the course of the investigation. Let me be very clear.

The actions and behavior of these individuals led to the death of a woman we believe to be completely innocent in this matter. Angela McKenzie's death was deemed a homicide. He took this person away who was loved by so, so many people. It was so useless. There was no reason to any of that.

and the man believed to be responsible was nowhere to be found. So we believe that there are people out there that know the whereabouts of the accused and that potentially assisted him in some way of evading arrest and fleeing a jurisdiction. That's next time on Crime Beat.

Crime Beat is written and produced by me, Nancy Hixt, with producer Dila Velasquez. Audio editing and sound design is by Rob Johnston. Special thanks to photographer-editor Danny Lantella for his work on this episode. I also want to welcome the newest member of our team, Jesse Wisner, our Crime Beat production assistant.

And thanks to Chris Bassett, the VP of Network Content, Production and Distribution and Editorial Standards for Global News.

I would love to have you tell a friend about this podcast, and you can help me share these important stories by rating and reviewing Crime Beat on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. You can find me on Twitter at Nancy Hixt, on Facebook at Nancy Hixt Crime Beat, and on Instagram at nancy.hixt. That's N-A-N-C-Y dot H-I-X-T. Thanks again for listening. Please join me next time.

Home Network is here. I love it. Discover the best shows and your favorite trusted experts all under one roof. Every Thursday, watch heartwarming programs like an all-new Extreme Makeover Home Edition at 8. We are so lucky to be a part of this. And Honest Renovations, starring Jessica Alba and Lizzie Mathis at 9. Changing these homes, we can change families. There's no place like it. Home Network, stream on Stack TV.