0:00 I'm not going to edit this video because I want to be 100% honest. I am against murder. I think that no one deserves to 0:06 die. This is Serena Vermesh, a small-time YouTuber who had no idea that only one 0:13 month after posting this video would become a victim of the very thing that she was talking about. At the time, 0:20 Serena was living in Surrey in British Columbia, but on one ordinary evening and while walking home from school, she 0:27 all of a sudden disappeared. Tragically, the next day her body would be found. 0:32 And what police uncovered left an entire nation furious. And that's because the 0:37 man responsible for her death wasn't some unknown monster or somebody with a clean track record, but he was actually 0:44 a formerly convicted offender who had spent most of his adult life behind bars. In fact, this man was such a 0:52 problem that many officials even saw this coming. So, who precisely was 0:57 Serena Vamesh? How did she encounter this evil monster? And how did the system fail her so violently? 1:06 Welcome, or welcome back to Coffee House Crime, folks. My name is Adrian, and today we're traveling to Canada to look 1:12 at a story that still haunts officers to this day. Now, this has to be one of the saddest stories that I've covered here 1:18 because there was nothing that Serena could have done. Meanwhile, her killer, well, he gave the authorities plenty of 1:25 warning. By the way, I post videos here weekly, so if that does sound like your kind of thing, then please do consider 1:30 subscribing. It really does help the channel out. And now, with all of that said, please grab yourself a coffee, get 1:36 comfortable, and let's caffeinate while we investigate. This is the case of Serena Vime. 1:51 Welcome to Surrey, British Columbia. Known to be a sprawling suburb which is found just south of Vancouver, Surrey is 1:58 filled with quiet neighborhoods, family homes, and treelined streets. The nights are both calm and quiet here, especially 2:05 around the neighborhoods and all of the industrial zones which shut down for the evening. However, on the evening of 2:11 September the 15th, 2014, that calm was suddenly broken when 17-year-old Serena 2:17 Verish never returned home from school. Now, at first, her mother was not immediately concerned because Serena was 2:25 not only a good kid, but she always stayed out of trouble. And so, maybe she had just stayed late with friends to 2:31 finish homework or perhaps even missed the bus. However, as the hours passed by, not only were all of her calls left 2:38 unanswered, but she hadn't been replying to any of her text messages either. The evening dragged on with absolute 2:44 silence. And by nightfall, her family were extremely concerned. And that is 2:49 when they decided to call the police. From that moment onwards, Serena was officially reported as missing, and the 2:56 Surrey RCMP issued a public alert to all nearby residents. By sunrise, Sur's many 3:02 streets, parks, and alleyways were all under scrutiny by officers. There's also concern for another young 3:08 woman who is missing this morning. Siri resident Serena Vermich was last seen Monday evening boarding a bus at 128th 3:14 Street and 64th Avenue. The 17-year-old's family is concerned about her health and her well-being. By now, 3:21 detectives had learned that Serena was last seen around 8:10 p.m. boarding a bus near 64th Avenue and 128th Street, 3:29 which is the usual bus route that she would take home before then walking the rest of the journey. They also noted 3:35 that there was nothing unusual about her plans, and that Serena was simply heading home. Of course, the problem is 3:41 that she never actually made it there, which means that somewhere along that familiar journey, something terrible 3:48 must have happened. As the hours slipped by, everyone who knew Serena grew more 3:53 concerned and more anxious. And as it turns out, this wasn't the first hardship her family had experienced 4:00 either. Following a serious car accident, her father, Kevin, was now a few months into a coma. Meanwhile, her 4:06 mother, Rumiko, was now living every parent's worst nightmare. You see, in a world where a disappearance can lead to 4:12 so many catastrophic outcomes, every single minute matters when a child goes missing. And so the race to find Serena 4:19 was on. And the thing is, Serena was not the kind of person to run away either. She was level-headed, kind-hearted, and 4:26 even a little bit goofy. In fact, she had her own YouTube channel where she liked to be her authentic self. And now, 4:32 for a bright young girl who loved to talk so much, she was all of a sudden silent. And so, before we travel down 4:39 this rather dark path, let's first take a look at who Serena actually was. 4:45 Before any of this happened, Serena was just like any other teen. She was creative. She loved to express herself 4:52 on her YouTube channel and was studying at Sullivan Heights Secondary School. She also loved music, hanging out with 4:58 friends, and posting videos online. At the time, she was running a small YouTube channel under the name of Iunna 5:05 Kitty, where she uploaded vlogs for fun and spoke about whatever crossed her mind. Looking back, there is quite a lot 5:12 of downto-earth content on this channel, which clearly was made back in the day when YouTube was all about the normal 5:18 person. Hi guys, it's Raina. So, I'm just getting ready for school and I think I'm 5:24 a little bit sick. Like, my nose is kind of stuffy and I can't breathe out of my 5:30 left nose. But yeah, so I just thought I'd make a little video. And I'm actually standing 5:36 in the bathroom cuz the lighting in my room is really bad. And my kitty is Oh, 5:43 and and she got a little bow tie. Look up. Look up. Come on. I want to see your 5:48 bow tie. See, she has a little bow tie. So she looks like Gigi, the the cat from 5:54 Kiki's Delivery Service. From a hobbies perspective, Serena was into Pokémon, 5:59 Spider-Man, Magic the Gathering, GTA, and cats. She truly was a real homebody 6:05 in all of the right ways. Her videos are quite nostalgic to watch actually, probably because they remind me of a 6:12 simpler time when I too was a teenager. And you have titles like, "Oh, hi guys." and other phrases that only made sense 6:18 back then in 2014. With only a 100 subscribers in her pocket, Serena was 6:24 not necessarily chasing fame. She just liked to create videos, to connect with like-minded people, and to make others 6:30 smile. Her friends described her as warm, funny, and kind, and the sort of person who could light up a classroom. 6:37 Just to point it out, guys, I know, very, very common phrase there. They are not my words. Inside the family, Serena 6:44 was her mother's pride and joy. She was reliable, thoughtful, and was never one 6:49 to cause trouble or disappear without a word. And of course, that is why when 6:55 she didn't come home that Monday night that everyone panicked. Yeah. Like I'm completely against 7:00 murder, but um cuz I mean, okay, a lot of murderers, none of them, like hardly 7:07 any have ever said they killed someone just because they think it's the right thing to do. They always had a reason, 7:12 whether it be like drugs or someone owed them money. but never gave it back or gangs or all 7:19 that stuff. They didn't do it because they thought it was the right thing to do. Most of 7:25 them. I haven't heard of any murderer that said it. They thought it was the right thing to do by killing someone. 7:33 Tragically, on the Tuesday, that being September the 16th of 2014, the search 7:38 for Serena took an awful turn. Around 24 hours after she had vanished, a search 7:44 party were busy combing through the industrial area of East Newton. And as one of the searchers peered into a 7:50 secluded patch of brush, which could be found just off the railway tracks along 146th Street and 66th Avenue, they 7:58 unfortunately came across a harrowing discovery. It was the body of a young girl, and visual identification was 8:05 enough to know that this was Serena. Police have now identified a body found in Suriri. RCMP confirmed 17-year-old 8:14 Serena Versh was found dead at the City Works yard on 66th Avenue. She was last 8:19 seen boarding a bus Monday night at 128th Street and 64th Avenue. Her death 8:24 is suspicious with an autopsy happening today. Investigators are canvasing the area and would like to speak to a man 8:31 seen Monday at the railroad tracks at 66th and Highland. he left in a gray or 8:36 silver pickup truck. The area in which her body was found was only a few meters away from the usual 8:42 path that she would take home from school, meaning that whoever had attacked her, well, it was in a place 8:48 that she knew very well. She was painfully close to where her family thought she would be that night. Meaning 8:55 that all along their greatest fears were in fact correct. Now, this area along 9:01 Upland Road, which is found in the industrial part of town, was dimly lit, 9:06 thick with undergrowth, and in stark contrast to the daytime, eerily silent. 9:12 During work hours, this place is busy with personnel from multiple companies nearby. But obviously, once they all go 9:19 home in the evening, the entire area is deserted. And of course, you could argue 9:24 that it's not the kind of area that any teen should be after dark. Within minutes, police officers flooded the 9:31 area. Yellow tape stretched across the tracks, and officers could be found surrounding every corner of the railway, 9:38 and no surprise, but employees of all of the nearby warehouses were told to stay 9:43 clear. Soon enough, the RCMP confirmed what everyone had feared, that this was 9:49 not an accident and without a doubt was homicide. The case was quickly handed 9:54 over to the integrated homicide investigation team, which is also known as IHIT, and news stations recorded 10:01 those officers working late into the night and well into the morning. News of the discovery spread quickly, and Surrey 10:08 quite simply changed overnight. The hope in finding Serena alive had collapsed 10:14 into grief, and that grief would soon give way to anger. In fact, entire 10:19 protests and rallies would soon be initiated, all due to Serena's death. But this is something that we'll talk 10:25 about later in this video. As forensic teams continued to work at 10:32 the crime scene, the general public's fear deepened. Of course, the main fear being, what if the killer was to strike 10:38 again? And all of a sudden, all parents in the area were more cautious about their children. Soon enough, specialists 10:45 confirmed that of course this was homicide, but also that she probably did not know her killer, meaning that this 10:51 was a random attack. And of course, this statement was comforting to no one because if this really was a random act 10:58 of violence, it was more likely that the killer would strike again. And so on that note, detectives began the slow, 11:04 methodical process of piecing all the clues together because whoever did this to Serena, well, they were still out 11:11 there. So, what do you do in a situation like this? Well, it all begins with knocking on doors, speaking to 11:17 residents, and trying to piece together her final movements. And thankfully, a 11:22 clue would soon emerge. It all began when the nearby resident reported seeing a man who was dressed all in dark 11:29 clothing, walking along the railway tracks only meters from where Serena's body was found. The witness also saw him 11:36 climbing into a silver Dodge pickup truck, which had a canopy and a roof rack, before then driving away. Now, not 11:43 only was this a precise detail, but it also occurred not even 1 hour before Serena's body was found. At this stage 11:51 of the investigation, the Ihit had two options. They could either keep this information quiet or they could go 11:58 public with it. And I think that they made the right decision here, but they quickly went public. also urging anyone 12:04 who had seen that truck to come forward. Back at home, police have a warning for 12:09 the public as they call the murder of a 17-year-old Suriri girl a random crime of opportunity. The search for Serena 12:16 Ver's killer is focused on a man driving a silver or gray Dodge pickup truck with a canopy and a roof rack. He was spotted 12:23 leaving the scene Tuesday night shortly before the teen was found dead. Serena's body was discovered near train tracks 12:29 off 66th Avenue in the Newton area. Thankfully, Surrey can be a busy area 12:35 even at night, and police knew that somebody must have seen that truck. And they were right, because within a couple 12:42 of hours, they had received multiple phone calls and tips from the public. At the same time, detectives started 12:48 pulling surveillance footage from all nearby businesses, hoping that the pickup's headlights might show up 12:54 somewhere in the grainy footage. Using the same surveillance cameras, they would also retrace the route she had 13:00 taken that Monday night, and surveillance footage would later confirm that Serena had boarded a bus at 64th 13:07 and 128th Street around 8:10 p.m. However, after that, her path went dark. 13:14 Off the back of that, the police appealed to anyone who had shared the same bus with her to come forward 13:20 because even the smallest detail like who she was sat next to or whether she seemed alone could provide to be 13:26 crucial. And then only 5 days after her disappearance, investigators would finally catch a break. It was around 13:34 6:00 a.m. on September the 20th that I hit and RCMP would finally make an 13:39 arrest. The suspect was described as a 43-year-old man from Surrey who was 13:44 quote already known to the police. Now, at first, his name was actually 13:50 protected under a temporary publication ban. But if you were talking to anybody within the police department, they 13:57 already knew that they likely had their guy. The man's name was Raymond Lee Casey. And as it turns out, this sack of 14:04 dirt was no stranger to crime. In fact, he was a repeat violent offender and had 14:10 a past that was so disturbing that his very presence in society felt less like 14:16 rehabilitation and more like an error. When news of the arrest broke out, 14:21 relief did wash over the city, but there would be other feelings that followed. To begin with, it was only 5 days after 14:28 Serena's death that the police reassured the community that the threat was over, which is great, but the relief would 14:35 quite quickly sour when people realized who her killer was. It was extremely 14:40 frustrating to learn that the RCMP's high-risk target team had already been monitoring Raymond before Serena's 14:47 murder. This means that not only did they know the kind of danger he posed, 14:52 but also they weren't able to stop him. It was at a press briefing that I hit called Serena's murder a quote horrible 15:00 crime of opportunity. And that phrase would strike a nerve across Canada because how was a man like this who was 15:07 being monitored daily even given an opportunity? 15:13 And if you think that this was all that angered the Canadians, well, think again. Because Raymond's history was 15:19 about to make the situation a whole lot worse. Now, this man was a walking red 15:25 flag and a one-man crime spree with a record so long that he practically needed his own library shelf. And would 15:31 you believe that between the ages of 15 and 38, that being the age that he murdered Serena, he had only spent 2 15:38 years out of prison. Genuinely the kind of guy who makes you wonder if evil ever takes a day off because even in the face 15:44 of his crimes, he was smug about it. Raymon's criminal history stretches as far back as his teenage years. First 15:52 jailed at the age of 15, he then spent most of his life behind bars and for good reason, too. In the year of 1991, 15:59 and at the age of 19, Raymond broke into a museum just after working hours before 16:05 then going on to sexually assault one of the workers at Knife Point. He then forced her into his car, took her to an 16:12 ATM machine, forced her to withdraw money, and then tied her to a tree in the woods before leaving her for dead. 16:19 It turns out that the only reason she had survived that night is because nearby farmers had heard her screaming. 16:26 And then only a few days after that, Raymond then robbed another woman at knife point, pushing her 2-year-old 16:32 daughter towards traffic in the process. For those crimes alone, Raymond was sentenced to 22 years in prison, which 16:40 as it turns out is one of the longest terms possible at that time. And the crazy thing is, as he was led out of 16:46 court, he then looked back towards his victims and said, "I'll see you in 22 years." While in prison, Raymond refused 16:54 every kind of rehabilitation program that was offered to him, instead collecting misconduct for violence as if 17:00 they were Pokémon cards. He was officially labeled as a high risk to kill or seriously harm other people if 17:07 ever released. And for this reason, parole boards denied him eight times throughout the 22 years. describing him 17:14 as a danger to others and somebody who should not be allowed out in public. In fact, Raymond even admitted this at one 17:21 point, telling the board that he did not want to be freed because he feared that he would reaffirmed. By the way, if you 17:28 look hard enough, you can even find his detention review online. In this report, the board's assessment of risk says the 17:35 board is satisfied that if released, you are likely to commit an offense causing the death of or serious harm to another 17:42 person before the expiration of the sentence you are now serving according to law. In fact, in a parole 17:49 consideration review, which was taken in January of 2013, and literally just 6 17:54 months prior to the end of his 22-year sentence, the board still believed that this man was a train wreck of a human 18:01 being. They stated that your case management team is of the opinion that there has been no change in the risk you 18:08 present to the community and in fact they note that your serious institutional behavior over the past 18:14 year has had a further negative impact on your case. In reaching its decision, the board notes that since the last 18:21 detention review, you have not participated in any interventions which would reduce your risk to reoffend and 18:28 that you continue to be assessed as a moderate to high risk to reoffend both violently and sexually. Based on a 18:36 review of your file and considering the circumstances set out above, the board continues to find that if released, you 18:43 are likely to commit an offense causing serious harm to another person before the expiration of your sentence. Now, 18:50 with a personality like his, I don't know why he wasn't kept in the slammer forever. I mean, imagine being so 18:57 inconsistently awful that even your mugsh shot looks tired of your existence. However, laws are laws, I 19:04 suppose. And once he had served his full sentence, Canada's judicial system had to let him go. And so in June of 2013, 19:12 and after 22 years behind bars, Raymond walked out free, unchanged, unrepentant, 19:18 and still dangerous. The entire situation is just absolutely mad when you think about it. This man clearly 19:25 posed a dangerous risk to others. And yet, even still, there was nothing that the law could do to stop him. In fact, 19:33 the authorities were so alarmed by this that they issued a public warning on the very day he was released. Surrey 19:40 residents were told that a high-risk offender who was violent, impulsive, and opportunistic, was now living among 19:46 them. And it turns out that even the city's mayor, Diane Watts, was furious. 19:53 For over a year, Raymond lingered in the Surrey area under a section 810 peace 19:58 bond, meaning that police officers could monitor him. but unfortunately not detain him. During that year, he did 20:05 breach his conditions once and although he was jailed briefly, he was released immediately afterwards. The system likes 20:12 to call this supervision, but to the rest of us, we like to call it gambling. And of course, by September of 2014, 20:20 those warnings had come again full circle. The so-called rehabilitation experiment had spectacularly failed. And 20:27 only 15 months after his release, he had done exactly what everyone feared the 20:32 most. He saw Serena walking home and then took full advantage of her vulnerability. Only a few moments later, 20:40 she was dead. So, now that we know that Raymond is to blame, what precisely happened? Well, on Monday, the 15th of 20:47 September, Serena attended her school as usual. There was nothing unusual or different here. It was just a regular 20:54 school day for her. At 8:10 p.m., she is last seen boarding a public bus at the corner of 64th Avenue and 128th Street, 21:02 where witnesses report that she was heading towards her home in the East Newton area of Surrey at around 8:30 21:09 p.m. and after disembarking the bus near her neighborhood. The walk, which she would do almost every day, takes her 21:15 along 66th Avenue, where she then needs to cross a set of railway tracks in a dimly lit wooded area. Now unknown to 21:22 her, Raymond was waiting for a random target to appear along this dimly lit area. Through chance and random 21:29 opportunity, the two would unfortunately cross paths. And of course, that unfortunately is when he attacked her. 21:36 From what we know, he then chased her and cornered her, alluding that she knew there was danger. And it turns out that 21:43 Serena put up an incredibly good fight against Raymond. At the time, she was armed with an Xacto knife for 21:50 self-defense. And although Raymond tragically overpowered her, Serena had dealt such severe injuries to him that 21:57 he required 22 stitches to close all of them up. And sadly, Serena was then 22:03 strangled to death by a piece of Raymond's clothing. And about 15 minutes later, he then fled the scene after 22:09 concealing her body in the dense underbrush. For reasons unknown, he then stupidly returned to the crime scene the 22:16 following day, of course, being spotted in the process. And only an hour later, Serena's body was found. In the months 22:22 that followed, prosecutors slowly but surely built their case against Raymond. And I do have to say it was airtight. I 22:30 mean, amongst their arsenal, they had forensic evidence, witness reports, matching DNA, and far, far more. And 22:36 given his violent history, few doubted that Raymond was not responsible. Now, unfortunately, Raymond was not formally 22:43 charged with firstderee, but seconddegree murder instead. And of course, this was a detail that angered 22:48 many residents. And that's because in Canada, first-degree murder usually requires proof of planning or 22:54 aggravating factors. And so, without concrete evidence of premeditation, prosecutors opted for the more 23:01 straightforward charge instead. But even still, this was extremely hard to accept. The community wanted the 23:07 harshest possible sentence. And honestly, I can understand why. For a 23:12 while, Raymond's identity was even hidden behind a publication ban. But Sur's residents were already outraged, 23:19 and put quite simply, they weren't having it. Even the city's mayor, Diane, spoke out about it, tweeting, "Protect 23:26 the innocent, not the criminal." Thankfully, public pressure worked. The ban was eventually lifted, and when 23:33 Raymond's name finally hit newspaper headlines, the outrage erupted even more. People realized that this was the 23:40 very man that the system had already warned could reaffend, and now they knew that he did. In the three years after 23:47 Serena's murder, Raymond maintained his plea of not guilty. The case was scheduled to go to trial, and Serena's 23:54 family prepared themselves for what would be a painful ordeal. But then, all of a sudden, on September the 14th of 24:00 2017, something unexpected happened. Just as the trial was about to begin, 24:06 Raymond abruptly changed his plea to guilty. It was described as a surprise guilty plea and caught everyone off 24:13 guard. He likely pleaded guilty simply to avoid the shame and embarrassment in 24:18 court. Now, under Canadian law, secondderee murder carries an automatic life sentence. The only question that 24:25 was left behind was for the judge to determine how long Raymond would wait until being eligible for parole, which 24:31 can range from 10 to 25 years under the current system. Now, personally, I 24:36 really don't think he received enough time here because in the end, he was sentenced to life in prison with no 24:42 chance of parole for only 17 years. Not 20 or 22 or 25, but only 17. And so 24:50 although it means that Raymond will be in his 60s before he can even apply for parole, I do genuinely not understand 24:56 why he wasn't given the maximum sentence. And for Serena's family, there was no true relief either, only the 25:03 hollow comfort of partial justice. They initially said that there would be no closure until sentencing, but even then, 25:10 it was clear that the closure that they were looking for was something that this kind of loss would simply never bring. 25:16 And when the judge read his final words and the guards led Raymond away in shackles, one of the family relatives 25:22 was heard over saying what everyone else was thinking. Lock him up and throw away the key. In a New Westminster courtroom, 25:30 43-year-old Raymond Casey pleaded guilty to seconddegree murder. He was charged with killing 17-year-old Serena Vermesh 25:37 from Suri. Her body was found near a set of railroad tracks in the East Newton neighborhood in 2014. Sur RCMP said her 25:45 death was a crime of opportunity and described it as a random attack. 25:50 And so with that said, the case of Serena Vish was at least in a legal sense closed. However, outside the 25:57 courtroom, the anger, questions, and disbelief still remained. Once the dust had settled after his sentencing, there 26:04 was one question that seemed to just keep coming back to the general public. Could this have possibly been 26:10 preventable? And the thing is, yeah, it really could have. I mean, for example, 26:15 if the parole board had actually taken its warnings seriously, then of course Serena would still be alive because 26:21 Raymond should have never been allowed out in public. And even I hit, who normally avoid politics like the plague, 26:27 admitted that this case sparked a fierce debate about what to do with dangerous offenders. And that's putting it 26:32 lightly. Now, on one hand, I do understand because when a criminal finishes their sentence, then what can 26:38 you do? But on the other hand, Raymond was a very clear case. After her death, 26:43 there were many political discussions about how Canada could prevent this from happening again. But you know what? Too 26:49 little too late. And I think all of these are just empty words because all of this happened only after Serena was 26:55 gone. Experts would later point out that if Raymond had been declared as a dangerous offender back in the '90s, 27:01 then he would have likely never seen daylight again. And the thing is, they're right because every document and 27:06 parole hearing said the exact same thing. That this man was a walking time bomb. And they didn't just miss all the 27:13 warning signs here. They quite literally wrote them down and then just let him walk out the front door. 27:21 To make matters worse, when the RCMP were pressed about the situation, they said that Raymond technically hadn't 27:27 broken any of his release conditions. However, to the community, that didn't mean much. If anything, it was just an 27:34 FU back to the public. After Serena's death, there were promises of reform and 27:39 the federal government rolled out Bill C26, that being the tougher penalties for child predators act. There was also 27:46 talk about longer parole reviews, stricter supervision, and better tools for tracking violent offenders. Well, 27:53 let's acknowledge the fact that people certainly uh all of us have a have a right to uh be be deeply disturbed and 27:58 angry about about what's happened in terms of the system. Um we you know 28:04 we've we've gone through a phase in the last little while of of increasing sentences, increasing punishments and uh 28:09 and decreasing an emphasis on on treatment and uh and making sure that people get the uh the treatment that 28:16 they need. Um this is we've got all of the pieces that we need in place to uh 28:21 make sure that that people like Mr. Casey uh uh are uh uh contained are um 28:28 watched by police and watched by probation. Um we need to question what 28:33 happened with him uh in uh in terms of uh treatment and assessment while he was while he was inside. 28:39 This is a very um rare set of circumstances, a very rare combination 28:45 of features. uh an offender with this kind of record and this kind of correctional history. 28:51 Most people who come out of prison uh aren't walking time bombs um as 28:56 this man um who is alleged to have committed this crime um appears to be. 29:02 However, for Serena and the rest of her family, none of that matters because she's gone. If she was alive, she would 29:08 have graduated high school in 2015, gone to college, and probably gone on to have 29:14 a happy and fulfilling life. but instead her community now visits her grave and 29:19 wonders how it came to this. In the end, Serena's story is just as heartbreaking 29:24 as it is maddening because this bright, funny 17-year-old girl who was full of 29:29 promise was taken by a man who never should have had the chance to ever hurt anyone again. It is no surprise that her 29:36 death will still hang over every discussion about parole and public safety in Canada. And sadly, maybe that 29:43 is Serena's legacy. Not the tragedy, but the change that it forced. Surrey has 29:48 already begun that change. By the way, there is better lighting, more patrols, and more vigilance across the country. 29:55 And sure, these may all be small steps for now, but in a way, they are born from her story. Indirectly, her death 30:03 may have saved other lives in the process. That is something that we will never know. Meanwhile, those closest to 30:09 Serena still remember her, not for what happened, but for who she was. 30:14 I love you all and I hope you have a beautiful day and I'll make another video when I feel better. So, yeah. Bye. 30:23 Have a good day and don't forget to smile. If Serena's family hadn't suffered 30:29 enough already, her father, who of course was already in a coma at the time that she died, would also pass away 2 30:36 months later. I honestly can't imagine what her family must have gone through in the months and years after. And this 30:42 is a reminder of how fragile life can be, even when we try our hardest. What really bothers me here is that at the 30:48 time of making this video, Raymond could possibly be walking the streets of Canada again in only 6 years time, which 30:56 considering all of the crimes he's committed, just completely baffles me. I mean, to be honest with you, I think 31:01 this monster should quite literally rot in prison. Anyway, those are my thoughts, but out of curiosity, what are 31:07 yours? As always, folks, please share your own opinions in the comments section down below. And I think that'll 31:13 do it for now, folks. But as always, thank you so much for watching today, and I'll see you again very shortly for 31:18 another video. Until that moment arrives, though, remember to look after each other, and of course, stay curious. 31:24 Thank you and goodbye.