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On July 30, 2008, a Greyhound bus traveling across Canada from Edmonton to Winnipeg became the scene of one of the most disturbing crimes in the country’s history. A 22-year-old carnival worker named Tim McLean was sitting quietly near the back of the bus, listening to music through his headphones. At a rest stop, a man named Vince Weiguang Li boarded the bus. He was quiet and calm, sitting near the front at first before moving to the seat right beside Tim. Without warning, and as the bus traveled along the Trans-Canada Highway near Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Li pulled out a large knife and began to stab Tim repeatedly in the neck and chest. Passengers heard a blood-curdling scream, turned to see the horrifying scene, and ran toward the front of the bus in panic. The bus pulled over, and the driver and others fled, trapping Li inside with Tim’s body. What happened next shocked not only those at the scene, but the entire nation. Li continued to stab Tim’s lifeless body dozens of times, then calmly and methodically decapitated him. He walked to the front of the bus holding Tim’s severed head and showed it to the remaining passengers and driver through the window. He then returned to the body and began mutilating it further—cutting off parts and reportedly consuming pieces of Tim’s flesh. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police arrived and began a standoff that lasted several hours. During this time, Li paced the aisle of the empty bus, still holding body parts. Around 1:30 a.m., he tried to escape through a window but was immediately tasered and arrested. In his pockets, officers found parts of Tim’s ears, nose, and tongue. At his trial in 2009, Li was found not criminally responsible due to severe untreated schizophrenia. He told psychiatrists that he believed he was acting on orders from God, and that Tim was a demon sent to kill him. He was sent to a high-security psychiatric hospital in Selkirk, Manitoba. Over time, he was granted increasing freedoms, including supervised and then unsupervised outings. In 2016, he was granted full freedom and in 2017 was given an absolute discharge, meaning he would no longer be monitored by the system. He changed his name to Will Baker and resumed life outside the institution. The case sparked national debate in Canada over the treatment of violent offenders with mental illness, especially those found not criminally responsible. Tim McLean’s family, especially his mother, was devastated not only by the loss but by the fact that Li was eventually released back into society. The murder remains one of the most shocking and tragic crimes in Canadian history. #UnsolvedMystery #TrueCrime #CreepyCases #coldcases #fyp
On July 30, 2008, a Greyhound bus traveling across Canada from Edmonton to Winnipeg became the scene of one of the most disturbing crimes in the country’s history. A 22-year-old carnival worker named Tim McLean was sitting quietly near the back of the bus, listening to music through his headphones. At a rest stop, a man named Vince Weiguang Li boarded the bus. He was quiet and calm, sitting near the front at first before moving to the seat right beside Tim. Without warning, and as the bus traveled along the Trans-Canada Highway near Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Li pulled out a large knife and began to stab Tim repeatedly in the neck and chest. Passengers heard a blood-curdling scream, turned to see the horrifying scene, and ran toward the front of the bus in panic. The bus pulled over, and the driver and others fled, trapping Li inside with Tim’s body. What happened next shocked not only those at the scene, but the entire nation. Li continued to stab Tim’s lifeless body dozens of times, then calmly and methodically decapitated him. He walked to the front of the bus holding Tim’s severed head and showed it to the remaining passengers and driver through the window. He then returned to the body and began mutilating it further—cutting off parts and reportedly consuming pieces of Tim’s flesh. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police arrived and began a standoff that lasted several hours. During this time, Li paced the aisle of the empty bus, still holding body parts. Around 1:30 a.m., he tried to escape through a window but was immediately tasered and arrested. In his pockets, officers found parts of Tim’s ears, nose, and tongue. At his trial in 2009, Li was found not criminally responsible due to severe untreated schizophrenia. He told psychiatrists that he believed he was acting on orders from God, and that Tim was a demon sent to kill him. He was sent to a high-security psychiatric hospital in Selkirk, Manitoba. Over time, he was granted increasing freedoms, including supervised and then unsupervised outings. In 2016, he was granted full freedom and in 2017 was given an absolute discharge, meaning he would no longer be monitored by the system. He changed his name to Will Baker and resumed life outside the institution. The case sparked national debate in Canada over the treatment of violent offenders with mental illness, especially those found not criminally responsible. Tim McLean’s family, especially his mother, was devastated not only by the loss but by the fact that Li was eventually released back into society. The murder remains one of the most shocking and tragic crimes in Canadian history. #UnsolvedMystery #TrueCrime #CreepyCases #coldcases #fyp

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