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       Reena Virk drama series does 'great disservice': retired cop
        
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       A true crime drama based on the 1997 murder of British Columbia teen
       Reena Virk does "a great disservice" to the victim, her family and her
       community, says a retired cop who worked on the original
       investigation.
        
       The Disney Plus miniseries "Under the Bridge," which premieres
       Wednesday, centres on the real-life story of Virk, who was 14 when she
       was swarmed and beaten by a group of teens in Saanich, B.C., and
       subsequently drowned in a waterway.
        
       Retired staff sergeant Chris Horsley, who served as a media liaison
       for the Saanich Police Department during the Virk case, says he hasn't
       seen any episodes but worries about whether the show compromises
       accuracy for "dramatic effect."
        
       "It's sad in a way because there's a lot of significant trauma in the
       real investigation," he says over the phone from Victoria.
        
       "But it's a Hollywood production, right? Unfortunately, it's made on
       the memory of someone who was in fact murdered here. So I probably
       won't watch the TV series."
        
       Lily Gladstone and Riley Keough star as a Saanich police officer and
       writer investigating Virk's death. Keough plays a version of late
       author Rebecca Godfrey, whose 2005 book "Under the Bridge," about
       Virk's murder, serves as the basis for the show.
        
       Horsley says none of the investigators involved in the Virk case heard
       from the "Under the Bridge" production team during the series'
       development and a spokesperson for the Saanich Police Department also
       says they were not consulted.
        
       "The minute that the production strays from the truth and starts to
       become fiction, I think that is a great disservice to not only Reena
       and her memory but also to the people who worked on the case and those
       who participated here in the community," says Horsley, adding that
       several anti-violence programs were launched in the Greater Victoria
       area following Virk's murder.
        
       Publicists for the production with Disney Plus Canada did not respond
       to a request for comment.
        
       Horsley says Virk's death is, to this day, the "biggest media story"
       Saanich has ever had.
        
       "It was very unique having not just young offenders but young female
       offenders committing such a degree of violence. I don't think it was
       something we got our heads around at that point."
        
       Episodes made available in advance portray Godfrey, who co-produced
       the series with creator Quinn Shephard before her death in 2022, as
       participating with police in the investigation. Horsley says this was
       not the case.
        
       "That didn't happen at all. She didn't write the book for long after
       the incident took place."
        
       In the pilot, Virk's uncle and father, played by Anoop Desai and Ezra
       Faroque Khan, visit the police station to report the girl missing but
       officers don't take them seriously.
        
       Horsley also counters this, saying school officials reported her
       missing and that Virk was living in a group home at the time because
       of a troubled relationship with her parents.
        
       He adds that Virk's family had an "excellent working relationship"
       with the police.
        
       According to documents released by the Parole Board of Canada last
       month, Virk's killer Kelly Ellard — who changed her name to Kerry Sim
       — told her case managers it was "so horrendous" that the series will
       "re-victimize the victim's family."
        
       Horsley says he expects that far more than just those connected
       directly to the case will be impacted by the series.
        
       "It's not just the family that would be retraumatized. I think it's
       also friends of Reena and other people that lived in the community
       that were affected by the murder," says Horsley.
        
       "The vast majority of the viewing audience, they don't have that
       personal connection, but here in Victoria there's many people that do.
       It's been 27 years but there's still a lot of people in Victoria that
       were affected by this murder."
        
       Horsley says he's perturbed by the proliferation of true crime shows
       "that are loosely based on real events."
        
       "The tragedy for me is they're not loosely based on real victims," he
       says.
        
       "These are real people with families that were murdered. And a lot of
       people are watching for entertainment value."
        
       _This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 7, 2024._
        
        
        
        
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