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December 20, 2002
Iqaluit man charged with
first degree murder in teens death
Police grateful for
communitys co-operation
Nunatsiaq News
Ivan Kilabuk Joamie, 24,
of Iqaluit, has been charged with first degree murder in connection with the
death of 13-year-old Jennifer Naglingniq.
Joamies first court
appearance was scheduled yesterday at 9:30 a.m. in the Nunavut Court of Justice
in Iqaluit.
Staff-Sergeant Mike Jeffrey
said police are grateful for the co-operation they received from numerous Iqaluit
residents who provided them with information during the investigation.
"Were not an
all-seeing police force that knows everything that goes on in the community
all the time, so we rely on the public to come forward and tell us what they
saw," Jeffrey said.
About 15 RCMP members worked
round-the-clock on the case, including a forensic identification officer brought
in from Edmonton.
Jeffrey said police are
still "drawing things together," writing reports, and are still willing
to listen to anyone with information concerning Naglingniqs death.
Jennifer Naglingniq, whose
lifeless body was found in the early morning hours of Dec. 6 at house 2230B
in Iqaluit, was laid to rest Dec. 17 after a funeral service in Iqaluits
St. Judes Cathedral.
Hundreds of Iqaluit residents
attended the service, filling every pew and spilling out onto the porch. About
a dozen of her grieving classmates lit candles for her.
On the day of her death,
the news spread rapidly through Iqaluit, leaving many residents shaken to the
core with grief and fear.
In the afternoon of Dec.
6, Naglingniqs passing was acknowledged at a vigil at Inuksuk High School
marking the 13th anniversary of the 1989 Montreal massacre, when a deranged
gunman shot 14 women at lÉcole Polytechnique.
Meanwhile, staff at Inuksuk
High School, where Naglingniq was a Grade 8 student, worked round the clock
last week to provide support for the schools 460 students.
Crisis workers, an Anglican
minister, and RCMP officers met with students and parents over the weekend following
her death.
Naglingniq, a student at
Iqaluits Inuksuk, lived in a public housing unit behind the Apex Road
Quick-Stop convenience store with her mother, Nicotye Naglingniq.
In the days immediately
following the discovery of her body, police did not speculate publically about
the cause of death, saying only that the death was "suspicious."
Last Thursday, after receiving
a report from a medical examiner in Edmonton, police announced that Naglingniqs
death was a homicide. But they released no information about the cause or manner
of her death.
A group of people in Iqaluit
have set up an account at the Bank of Montreal to hold a bursary fund set up
in Jennifer Naglingniqs name. The bursary will go to an Inuksuk student
who does something to help make Iqaluit a better place.
People interested in donating
to the fund may call Madeleine Allakariallak or Patricia Bell at CBC Iqaluit,
or Terry Young at Inuksuk High School.
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