Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 29, 2013, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A3
The Winnipeg Free Press reaches
more adults now than 10 years ago.
2 0 1 3 M O D E L Y E A R CL E A R A N C E O N N O W
SAVE UP TO
$ 20,000
ON SELECT MODELS! FINANCING
UP TO 84 MO.
ZERO
PERCENT
L U C K Y ' 1 3 SA L E S E V E N T
VISIT BIRCHWOOD. CA TO FIND OUT HOW YOU CAN SAVE!
HONESTY . INTEGRITY . EXCELLENCE . RESPECT
A+ ACCREDITED BBB MEMBER
WORRIED ABOUT FLOODING?
* Call for details regarding City of Wpg
Basement Flood Protection Subsidy
Price $ 2499.99
Less City of
Wpg. Subsidy ($ 1500.00 )*
Protect
Yo ur
Basement!
$ 999 99
INSTALLED!
Sump Pump
and Pit
204- 774- 1474
635 Ferry Rd, Wpg, Man.
www. ontimegroup. ca
IT'S TIME TO CALL
TOP NEWS
WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, MONDAY, JULY 29, 2013
winnipegfreepress. com A 3
U NTIL Wednesday, Lisa Gibson's public presence
was a smiling picture on her Facebook
account, writing about her young daughter,
Anna, or her infant son, Nicholas.
" Man, I love this kid," Gibson wrote about twoyear-
old Anna.
All that's left of the 32- year- old mother, Anna,
and three- month- old brother Nicholas, are memories
and many questions.
Their deaths and the tragic events of the case
are part of a police investigation.
Winnipeg police confirmed Sunday the body
pulled from the Red River in Stephen Juba Park
Saturday was Gibson, who had been missing since
Wednesday morning.
Police said Gibson was a " person of interest"
after she disappeared
from her Coleridge
Park Drive home
Wednesday morning,
leaving her children
for dead in a bathtub.
Police did not release
the cause of Gibson's
death Sunday.
The discovery of
her body was the expected
conclusion to
the gut- wrenching
saga - police held out
little hope Gibson was
still alive during the
three- day search -
and another piece to
a heartbreaking case
that hung over the city.
" This type of tragedy will affect people in different
ways," Const. Eric Hofley told members of
the media after confirming the body as Gibson
Sunday.
Police said the homicide unit will continue to investigate
the case even though Gibson's body was
found.
She was the last person known to be with the
children and all that is left are a multitude of questions
surrounding the case.
Brian Gibson, husband and father, was at work
when emergency units responded to a cryptic 911
call from his family's home.
Sources told the Free Press a woman said the
home's address and to " send police" before hanging
up
Lisa Gibson was recently diagnosed and treated
for postpartum mental illness. It's not known
whether the diagnosis was for postpartum depression
or postpartum psychosis, though it's believed
Gibson suffered the latter.
Confusion over the two diagnoses prompted
Hofley to forward a portion of an email from an
unidentified psychotherapist to media outlets Sunday,
explaining the differences between the two
conditions and how unlikely postpartum depression
would be a factor in the Gibson case.
A spokeswoman for the Winnipeg Regional
Health Authority says officials have begun the
process of reviewing the care Gibson received in
the health system. This review is standard practice
in such cases, the spokeswoman wrote in an
email.
Meanwhile, as the investigation moves into the
next phases at the police and medical level, residents
of the neighbourhood where the deaths took
place will try to shift back to normalcy.
The makeshift memorial of stuffed animals, letters
and flowers at the corner of Coleridge Park
Drive, Bedson Street and Assiniboine Avenue -
right next to the Gibson home - received several
visitors again Sunday, many of them mothers with
young children.
Kelli Parisi took her 12- year- old twin daughters,
Erika and Makayla, to pay their respects to
the Gibson children. She wondered how the community
would be able to find some relief from the
tragedy.
" I don't know if you can ever get over this," said
Parisi.
" I get it, I'm a mom, it's hard. Obviously I didn't
have what she was going through, and having
twins was hard enough... it's very sad. I feel so bad
for the family. My heart breaks, it truly does.
" It's surreal and it impacts everyone. You feel
like you're in a movie. This just doesn't happen
here."
It took Kimberley Bray several days to process
the events of Wednesday. She was at a loss for
words after visiting the growing memorial with
her seven- year- old daughter, Kaley Mae.
" I couldn't read about it. I wasn't ready ( to come
here).
" Today I was ready. It took me that long," Bray
said, fighting back tears.
Walking her dog past the memorial, a neighbour
talked about the serenity of the street. It's a quiet
slice of suburbia, well off the beaten path of the
city's major arteries.
But there's a different feeling in the area now,
she said, staring at the Gibson home from across
the street.
It's like there's a fog of sadness over the neighbourhood.
" How can you forget what happened here? I
have no idea how the family moves on from this,"
she said, not wanting to give her name.
" The husband must be beside himself. I don't
know if he's even been home yet. How can he
move on from what happened? How can you walk
in this house again?
" This is going to go on for years. Things have
changed here."
elizabeth. fraser@ freepress. mb. ca
adam. wazny@ freepress. mb. ca
A TIMELINE OF THE TRAGEDY / A4
Unimaginable tragedy worsens
Body in river
was mother
of two dead tots
Being alone with
kids worried mom
LISA Gibson had apparently expressed concern
about being left alone with her children in the
days before they died, according to police officers
connected to the case.
Sources told the Free Press those close to
Gibson say she realized she needed help and was
reaching out.
It's the reason she saw a doctor July 18. That's
when she was diagnosed with a postpartum
illness - it's not clear whether depression or
psychosis - and given medication.
Sources say police have also been told Gibson
made it clear she was willing to accept treatment
within a confined facility. However, that didn't
happen.
Police are investigating why. The Winnipeg
Regional Health Authority is also reviewing all
contact they had with Gibson.
" Apparently it was worked out that the motherin-
law would come by every day to assist," a
source said.
That's what happened.
The mother- in- law was present at the home just
as police rushed to the scene Wednesday following
a 911 call from a woman - believed to be
Gibson - which stated the address and to " send
police."
Both children were discovered unresponsive in
the bathtub, and Gibson had vanished.
James Jewell, a former Winnipeg homicide
detective who retired from the force in 2012, told
the Free Press mental- health bed shortages are a
chronic issue in Winnipeg.
He recalled " numerous" times where someone in
need of dire mental- health treatment in a confined
setting was quickly returned to the streets.
" We couldn't believe it, you knew they needed
help and they'd be out in 20 minutes," he said.
Jewell couldn't speak to the specifics of the
Gibson case but said he wouldn't be surprised if a
public inquest is called.
Only the chief medical examiner has that power.
Now that there won't be a criminal trial, an inquest
may be the only way such details become public.
- Mike McIntyre
By Elizabeth Fraser and Adam Wazny
' How can you forget
what happened
here? I have no
idea how the
family moves on
from this. This is
going to go on for
years. Things have
changed here'
- Westwood resident
On Sunday, Kelli
Parisi and her
daughters, Erika
and Makayla, pay
their respects
at a memorial
for two children,
Anna and Nicholas
Gibson, who
died Wednesday.
The body of their
mother, Lisa
Gibson, was recovered
from the
Assiniboine River
Saturday.
JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
A_ 03_ Jul- 29- 13_ FP_ 01. indd A3 7/ 28/ 13 10: 29: 21 PM
;