Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Comments closed.

Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.

Please see our Commenting Policy for more.

Calgarians gather for vigil, honouring slain woman and her father

WATCH: In Calgary, a mother of three and her father were remembered last night during a vigil. Police believe they were victims of a targeted attack allegedly carried out by the woman's husband. The attack is raising alarms about the growing issue of intimate partner violence across Canada, and advocates are calling for changes to the legal system to better address the pressing concern. Scott Roberts reports – Jan 4, 2025

Five days after a Calgary mother of three and her father were killed in what police detectives believe were targeted attacks by her husband, a vigil took place to pay tribute to the victims.

Story continues below advertisement

While the victims’ names had already been disclosed earlier this week by those who knew them, the Calgary Police Service announced Friday afternoon that autopsies have been completed in the case.

Police confirmed 33-year-old Ania Wardzala-Kaminski and her 71-year-old father Stanislaw Wardzala were the two people killed. Police did not reveal any other information obtained through the autopsy, including how they died.

Wardzala-Kaminski, who worked as an elementary school teacher in Cochrane, and her father were found dead at two separate locations in Calgary on Sunday. The deaths triggered a manhunt for Benedict Kaminski — Ania’s spouse — that also prompted an emergency alert.

Story continues below advertisement

His body was then found by police near a vehicle parked in a rural area about 80 kilometres northwest of Calgary.

Police have not said how the victims died, but have noted Benedict, who was quickly identified as a suspect, was a licensed gun owner who had access to firearms.

Sarah Gustafsson, a friend of Ania’s, spoke to Global News ahead of Friday night’s vigil.

Story continues below advertisement

“She was just this giving person,” Gustafsson said of Ania. “In our community in Tuscany we have a buy-nothing group, and most of her posts were looking for things to enhance her classroom. She wanted books or Christmas lights or decorations.

“She was just very giving and very conscious about making things special for everyone.”

Many attendees wore hockey jerseys in tribute to Ania who was a lifelong Calgary Flames fan.

A GoFundMe page started by a family friend to support Ania’s children had raised over $275,000 by early Friday afternoon.

–with files from Global News’ Skylar Peters and The Canadian Press

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article