Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - October 24, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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NEWS I THE HUNT FOR BEVERLEY’S KILLER
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2025
Clinging
to hope
B
EVERLEY Rowbotham’s last surviving
sibling will light a candle tonight, a
sombre ritual every Oct. 24, when fond
memories intertwine with anguish over her
horrific slaying 25 years ago.
Barb Kilpatrick hasn’t lost hope that new
information will emerge, or something will
happen in her lifetime, to bring closure and
justice for her sister.
“Bev has been dead for 25 years. That’s a very
long time, and all the things she’s missed, all the
family things — her boys growing up, all the new
nephews and nieces — we’re just feeling really
sad,” Kilpatrick, 76, told the Free Press. “I hold on
to hope. Hope is everything.”
Rowbotham, 42, was killed in her family’s back-
yard in the RM of St. Andrews, police concluded,
in one of Manitoba’s highest-profile homicides in
recent memory.
Nearly eight years passed before RCMP
charged a suspect — her husband Mark Stobbe.
The former Manitoba government adviser denied
killing her and was acquitted of second-degree
murder in March 2012. No one has been charged
or tried since then.
Prosecutors claimed Stobbe hit Rowbotham
16 times in the head with a hatchet following an
argument, and then moved her body and cleaned
up the scene, while their children slept inside
their home.
His defence lawyer accused police of having
“tunnel vision” focused on the wrong person, and
suggested Rowbotham was killed by a stranger
who had tried to rob her.
RCMP found Rowbotham’s body in the back
seat of her Ford Crown Victoria in Selkirk around
4 a.m. on Oct. 25, 2000, about 90 minutes after
Stobbe reported her missing. The car was next
to a service station, some 15 kilometres from the
couple’s home on River Road.
Rowbotham’s two sisters decided to light can-
dles in her memory every Oct. 24 because RCMP
believed she was killed on that date.
This year’s remembrance has an additional lay-
er of sadness for Kilpatrick. She is also mourning
her sister Betty Rowbotham, 79, who died Oct. 18.
A funeral will be held 25 years to the day the pair
learned Beverley was dead.
“(Betty) would have liked to have seen justice for
Beverley. As the years went by and nothing hap-
pened, she wanted it just so bad,” Kilpatrick said
from her home in Rocky Mountain House, Alta.
While the RCMP investigation is inactive, Kil-
patrick and her daughter, Melanie Larocque, said
it’s possible key information could still be shared
with investigators.
They are trying to find a man and woman who
they said left a mysterious note for Kilpatrick,
who was a nurse at a hospital in Rocky Mountain
House in March 2018, when she happened to be
away on vacation.
Kilpatrick and Larocque provided a photo of
the note, signed by “Paul and Ann” from Calgary,
to the Free Press in a bid to identify the couple.
The author claimed “something very horrible”
happened to their family in 1999 and 2000, and
“circumstances” concerning their family “came
into contact” with Rowbotham’s family before her
death.
Kilpatrick was told the couple was of retire-
ment age, and the woman had a limp and used a
cane.
Larocque, 50, said the couple phoned Kilpat-
rick’s house number from a blocked line, but
no one was home and contact details were not
provided in a voice message.
She said the letter was given to RCMP, but
“Paul and Ann” were not identified and never got
in touch again.
“Come forward. Share what you have,” Kilpat-
rick pleaded.
Larocque said she has always wondered if the
killer will come forward and confess “because
they couldn’t live with their guilt.”
Rowbotham would be 67 if she were alive today.
Her sister and niece remembered her as a smart,
loyal and adventurous woman who went skydiv-
ing, taught in Japan and completed two university
degrees.
“She was a social worker. She was very passion-
ate about women’s causes,” Kilpatrick said. “Her
boys were the light of her life.”
Rowbotham inspired her niece to become a
social worker.
“She was a voice for the voiceless. Wherever
she was, she was lending a helping hand or being
an advocate for the less fortunate,” Larocque
said.
R
OWBOTHAM was preparing to interview for
a job with the provincial government when
she died. Stobbe was a communications
adviser to government of Gary Doer.
The slaying happened about five months after
the couple and sons Jacob and Nicholas, then
three and five, moved to a quiet area just north
of Winnipeg from Regina, where Stobbe, then 42,
was a top adviser to then-Saskatchewan premier
Roy Romanow.
Armed with those details, the media and public
were captivated by the homicide. It happened
at a time when people were not as connected by
technology, or exposed to a deluge of information
about crimes around the world, said Frank Corm-
ier, a criminologist at the University of Manitoba.
Social media was not yet a domain for rampant
speculation.
“The case really stood out at the time,” Cormier
said. “As soon as some details started to come
out, the circumstances seemed highly unusual, to
say the least. The amount of circumstantial evi-
dence we started hearing about in news reports,
everyone was talking about it.”
Early on, Stobbe told police his wife left home
around 8:30 p.m. to buy items at a Safeway in Sel-
kirk, after doing a larger shop that afternoon.
He told investigators he fell asleep while
getting his youngest son back to bed, and awoke
around 2:30 a.m. to find Rowbotham wasn’t at
home.
Stobbe phoned his in-laws and RCMP, who
immediately considered him a suspect, court
records said. Police put him under visual surveil-
lance and tapped his phone.
Court documents said Stobbe initially refused
to allow a search of the property when officers
stopped by on Oct. 26, 2000. He asked them to
wait until after his wife’s funeral. RCMP obtained
a warrant and began searching the next day.
A second-degree murder count was laid in
May 2008, after a B.C. prosecutor reviewed the
evidence and recommended the charge. Manitoba
sought an out-of-province opinion, given Stobbe’s
earlier government job.
Four Alberta prosecutors did not recommend
charges during earlier reviews. The evidence
was insufficient and there was no reasonable
likelihood of conviction, they found.
Opening the trial in January 2012, the Crown
acknowledged its case was circumstantial. No
eyewitness or direct evidence linked Stobbe to
the crime. The murder weapon was never found.
The Crown alleged the couple’s seven-year
marriage became strained after the move to
Manitoba, leading to a fatal argument. Stobbe
told court there were no serious problems in their
marriage.
Investigators found Rowbotham’s blood, hair
and fragments of her skull in the yard, and a
small blood stain on a garage fridge that had
mixed DNA from Rowbotham and Stobbe, court
heard.
The Crown said blood on a towel and tissues at
the home belonged to Stobbe, who told jurors he
cut himself shaving.
An unidentified male’s DNA was found on the
purse that was with Rowbotham in the car, court
heard. Her socks and shoes were not on her feet.
She had defensive wounds, court heard.
The Crown alleged Stobbe abandoned the car
and returned home on a bicycle that was in the
trunk. Witnesses who reported seeing a large
man on a bike could not identify him.
Stobbe spent six days on the stand, where he
repeatedly denied killing his wife. He cried after
telling jurors he was in the house and should have
been able to stop the killer.
The seven-week trial heard from around 80
witnesses. Jurors deliberated for three days
before returning a not guilty verdict that shocked
Rowbotham’s sisters.
Manitoba RCMP spokeswoman Cpl. Melanie
Roussel said this week the investigation is no
longer active, but it could potentially be reopened
if information relating to a “new” suspect is
brought forward.
After the trial, Stobbe returned to Saskatoon,
where he lived with his sons, before relocating to
Regina. He began writing books, remarried and
became a college sociology instructor.
One of his books touched on his time in pre-tri
-
al custody. He also wrote about “Mr. Big” stings
that undercover police use to gain confessions,
and prosecutions of homicides in which victims’
bodies were not found.
Stobbe declined an interview request for this
article.
“Anything I say gets interpreted by some
people from the worst possible outlook, so I’ve
decided to say nothing,” he said.
In 2018, he told the Free Press he believed he
was charged because the high-profile nature of
the case put pressure on the justice system to
come up with a result.
Kilpatrick and Larocque said they do not have
any contact with Stobbe, but they remain in touch
with sons Jacob and Nicholas.
Kilpatrick and Larocque said they were ap-
palled by the subject matter of Stobbe’s books.
They are frustrated by what they described as
inaction on his part to help solve his wife’s killing.
“He’s such a brilliant researcher. Maybe he
could be researching. It’s sort of like Bev never
existed,” Kilpatrick said. “I would think some-
body would be wanting things looked into, want-
ing to find out why, how?”
“You have this man, my uncle, who is writing
these books and is teaching criminology at a
college level, but yet nothing has been done to
pursue any justice for Bev,” Larocque said. “It
makes no sense whatsoever.”
When he was acquitted in 2012, Stobbe told re-
porters he would like to know the killer’s identity
but, as a judge pointed out in court, it’s not his job
to find out.
Kilpatrick and Larocque continue to speak out,
they said, because Rowbotham would not give up
on a loved one in similar circumstances.
They were involved in a new Canadian True
Crime podcast episode, Remembering Beverley
Rowbotham, that will be released Saturday.
“I wonder if sometimes people think, ‘Oh, it’s
been 25 years, just let it rest.’ We’ve always said
Bev was a very strong advocate for women and
for children,” Larocque said. “If this happened to
any one of us, she would be shouting from a roof-
top demanding justice and demanding closure.”
chris.kitching@freepress.mb.ca
CHRIS KITCHING
Twenty-five years after
Beverley Rowbotham
was slain, her family
believes a mysterious
letter could shed light
on the case that
gripped Manitoba
NATALIE LARSEN PHOTO
Beverley Rowbotham’s niece, Melanie Larocque (left) and sister, Barb Kilpatrick, have not lost hope that one day
there will be justice and closure for their loved one (top right), who was found murdered in Selkirk on Oct. 25, 2000. A mysterious letter Rowbotham’s family received hints
at a resolution to the case that is still to come.
;