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Artical one
Unsolved Murder - Police took the
unusual step of calling a press
conference in 1998 to reveal some
details, such as the typwriter used to
produce a letter which accompanied
the flashlight bomb.
Looking for answers - Diane
Greavette tapes an informative
poster about her husband Wayne’s
1996 murder to a pole at the
Edinburgh Market plaza in Guelph’s
south end. Family members are
blanketing the region with these
porters hoping someone can help
solve the case.
Family fears murder
will never be solved
PUSLINCH - It has been five years since self-employed
machinist Wayne Greavette flicked on a flashlight that ended
his life. The unsolved Dec. 12, 1996 murder of the married
father of two, who died when the flashlight bomb delivered
to his farmhouse by Canada Post detonated, remains one of
the most bizarre crimes in the annals of Puslinch Township.
Today, his family - widow Diane, son Justin, 25, and daughter
Danielle, 22 - is fighting back.
The family is worried the crime will never be solved, despite
what Diane said have been the best efforts of Ontario
Provincial Police.
She's convinced someone out there has clues and has been
afraid to step forward.
But with half a decade gone, the Greavettes are hopeful
enough time has passed for those individuals to feel
comfortable giving police what they need to apprehend the
killer.
A day doesn't go by that the family's thoughts aren't with a
loved one taken from them at age 42.
"I loved him dearly," said Diane Greavette. "We always think
of him. We're trying to get on with our lives, but we can't.
“Why am I without a husband? Why are my children without a
father?"
To jar memories, the Greavettes are blanketing the region
with posters offering a $5,000 reward for information leading
to a conviction. They also have a home page on the Internet:
www.unsolvedmurders.ca.
Despite fears for the family's safety with the killer still at
large and the motive unknown, Diane is speaking out for the
first time since the explosion that also slightly injured Justin,
who was in the room when his father turned on the
flashlight, ostensibly an anonymous gift. After the killing, the
family disappeared into the Greater Toronto Area, fearing for
their safety.
Diane has never spoken to the media until now, bristling at
suggestions in some newspapers that her husband was an
outlaw biker, or public speculation he might have been
involved with the Mafia or a drug cartel.
"A lot of people are still left with that in their thoughts," she said.
Nothing, she said, could be further from the truth. Her husband was a quiet, hard-working man devoted
to his family, she said.
He wasn't involved in anything illegal or in any trouble that she knew. That wouldn't have been in his
character, she stressed. Police have also consistently maintained the murder wasn't biker-related.
In any case, "Nobody deserves what happened here," said Diane, an attractive, slim blonde whose eyes
were red with emotion as she spoke to a Mercury reporter at an area inn.
Diane has not remarried, saying she's still in love with the sweetheart she met as a teenager.
"I know him for the man he was. He was well-loved and respected by all of us. We had a good family
home. I know we didn't hurt anybody. We didn't rip anybody off. We didn't owe anybody any money.”
Diane said it's not fair the killer is about to celebrate another Christmas "and our lives have been
destroyed."
Police have had frustratingly few leads. On Nov. 5, 1998, they took the unusual step of calling a press
conference at the Puslinch Community Centre to reveal some details of the killing, in hopes the
publicity would prompt new information.
"That was a big step for them. They were trying to do everything they could to get someone to come
forward."
Police hoped they could flush out letters people may have saved that were typed on the same machine
or font used to create the letter accompanying the package bomb that killed Greavette at the family's
Concession 11 farmhouse.
The letter, which surprisingly survived the blast, featured a key flaw: a back slash after a period. (.\)The
letter was produced on a Smith Corona typewriter equipped with a daisy wheel 10/12 font sold by the
identifying number 59543. The typewriter was marketed under a variety of brand names, while the
fonts were sold under the Smith Corona label in department stores.
The letter may have been a ruse to put the victim at ease. It was from a non-existent company seeking
business with Greavette, a machinist selling bottled water from natural springs on the family property.
OPP Det. Insp. Mike Coughlin said the case remains active and is regularly discussed by officers. From
time to time, bits of information come to light, though Coughlin conceded, "There's not an abundance
of information."
He welcomed the family's efforts to appeal for a break. "Any information that comes from any source is
welcome."
Meanwhile, Diane finds it hard to contain her anguish.
"It's been five years and still to date there's been no arrest made in the murder of Wayne," she said, her
voice rising in anger.
"This person is still out there. We want to be protected. Somebody knows something."
She's unnerved by the thought the killer may be a distant business or social acquaintance.
"Did I have this person in my house? Did I give him coffee? Was it somebody that was close to us?
Somebody did a very drastic thing. There have to be answers. We're pleading to the public for help.
"It's five years. People are forgetting what happened. This man has been taken and there's a murderer
out there. I'm so angry."
Wednesday December 21, 2001
Credit: Vic Kirsch
The Guelph Mercury