Raymond Cormier, man acquitted in death of Manitoba teen, found dead, says her great-aunt

The man acquitted in a trial on charges of murder in the death of teenager Tina Fontaine has died, her great-aunt told CBC News on Monday.

Homicide detectives told Thelma Favel, who raised Fontaine for a period of her life, about the death of Raymond Cormier on Friday, she said.

“He took the truth with him,” she said in a phone interview from her home in Powerview-Pinefalls, Man., approximately 100 km north of Winnipeg.

As reported by the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, Cormier’s body was found in Kenora, Ont.

CBC News has contacted Ontario Provincial Police in Kenora to confirm, but did not immediately receive a response.

Favel says she was “very disappointed that he died.”

“I know he, he did it … I just have that feeling in me that he was the one responsible for Tina’s death.”

Tina Michelle Fontaine, from Sagkeeng First Nation in Manitoba, was 15 years old when she died.

She went missing in July 2014 and her body was found wrapped in plastic and a duvet cover in Winnipeg’s Red River on Aug. 17, 2014. 

The Winnipeg Police Service charged Raymond Cormier, then aged 53, with second-degree murder. 

On Feb. 22, 2018, a jury acquitted Cormier. A month after the trial ended, Crown prosecutors decided they would not appeal the case.

A bound booklet has a cover with a picture of a young girl on it. Beside it is another book with the words "Love For Tina" on the cover.
Tina Fontaine, 15, was from Sakgeeng First Nation, north of Winnipeg. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

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