May 21/2024 Lindsay Buziak, the cover-up continues, and the identity of the real informant remains top secret.

THE PROTECTED INFORMANT
The real informant has been living the life ever since Lindsay was murdered.
Luxury homes, fancy vehicles, travelling, it’s all hers for the taking. She has informant privilege and having secured a life-long immunity agreement with the RCMP years ago she is guaranteed anonymity. The mind-boggling question still remains – what was the informant’s motive for picking up that phone in November 2007 and ratting out the Delalcazar drug run to Calgary? At one point it was believed that the informant wanted to take down Erickson Delalcazar, he would lose the money and drugs, and his days in the drug business would be done.
What if this was not the case? What if the informant had been acting as a police informant for a very long time prior to Lindsay’s murder, agreed to be a police informant in exchange for being given immunity from prosecution for something her or another member of her family had done? It may seem like a stretch, but the reality is “the glove fits perfectly”.
So, the informant knows the cartel is sniffing around the Re/Max office having discovered that the person who made the call to the Calgary Police is hot on their trail. Well then, it’s time to go into self-survival mode, and the only was to do that is to throw Lindsay under the bus and get the message to the cartel that Lindsay was the informant. Oh well, Lindsay’s gone and it’s back to business. I have an immunity agreement, and the cops can’t touch me.
One question remains, how did the real informant come by the information about the drugs heading to Calgary? And she made a 2nd call to the Calgary Police after the bust to tell them they had missed the cocaine in the safe. I believe the sequence of events how that came about is all coming to light.
And to think that there were members of the RCMP who knew all throughout this investigation who the informant was and her connection to the drug bust and stayed silent, all the while the Saanich Police knew nothing about this immunity agreement until years later. No damn wonder this case has stalled for 16 years, like I said before, it’s one big fkging cover-up. And it’s not just one organization – it’s all of them
This is a complicit conspiratorial cover-up by the Saanich Police, RCMP, Victoria, the Calgary Police, and now the Vancouver Island Integrated Homicide Unit has recently joined in the cover-up to ensure that this murder will never be solved. Just how high does this go who are all these agencies so desperately trying to protect.
It’s as if the Saanich Police present their case findings to a higher-up, but they are told to stand down, and given orders on how to proceed.
There is way more to this case than Saanich was ever allowed to know. Privileged information. Another tangled web of something going on well above the Saanich Police level. If there had been no interference by higher powers this case would have been solved years ago. We have been told many times that the RCMP and Saanich Police have been working together on this case, but based on what we’ve learned over the years this statement couldn’t be further from the truth.
The SPD continue to present this case to the public by letting them believe it’s top priority. But the lack of progress would strongly suggest that they are barely keeping it on life support for the sole purpose of being able to tell the court that the case is active, not cold. The question is, why?
THERE’S ANOTHER ANGLE HERE IT’S BEEN TOUCHED ON BEFORE BUT NEVER DISCUSSED AT LENGTH. A REDDIT POSTER RECENTLY PUT IT INTO CONTEXT.
I picture there could be multiple scenarios that would involve different degrees of police involvement/culpability:
- a police informant pointed the finger at an innocent person
- the police know their informant pointed the finger at an innocent person
- the police helped their informant implicate an innocent person
- a police informant arranged for the murder of an innocent person
- the police know their informant arranged for the murder of an innocent person
“Of all of the people involved in the drug trafficking operation, the real informant would be the individual most known to police – pretty risky orchestrating a murder when you are very obviously on the police’s radar already. But: different police forces, and different crimes, with only the barest connection between them; and police may not have really looked at any relationship.”
“Police incompetence has been alleged from the start. Now, if it turns out that the police’s own informant (albeit the Calgary Police’s/RCMP’s informant rather than the Saanich Police) is responsible, doesn’t that potentially implicate the RCMP/Calgary Police too? There is even the possibility that not only did a police informant arrange for the murder, but that the police might know about it, or, even more, have been an active participant in the interest of protecting a source – not necessarily involved directly in murder, but potentially just knowing that their informant was trying to implicate Buziak or maybe even participating in it.”
If any of them are true, each carries embarrassment/scandal for the police and, yeah, I can see the possibility that it would lead one or more of the involved police forces to stall the investigation. This certainly sounds plausible, more plausible than other theories. Someone tenuously connected to a major drug trafficking operation gets blamed for the bust, either through a misunderstanding (the people in charge see a stranger show up and they get busted days later and attribute it to her) or intentional misdirection (the actual informant trying to keep the blame off of themselves, and actively encouraging the misunderstanding).
IT’S NICE TO SEE OTHER PEOPLE CURIOUS ABOUT THE PIVOTAL ROLE LIKELY PLAYED BY THE REAL INFORMANT IN WHAT ULTIMATELY RESULTED IN LINDSAY’S MURDER.
ANOTHER VERY INTELLIGENT/WISE FRIEND OF MINE HAD A FEW THINGS TO SAY DURING OUR RECENT CONVERSATION
Once the cartel believed the main informant to be a female in Victoria, the main informant would immediately have had strong motive to point the finger at an innocent person—a female living in Victoria– who could convincingly be cast as the informant. As to the police knowing this, if they didn’t already know it as a matter of fact, they would have strongly suspected it after someone other than the informant ended up dead.
“Especially if Lindsay was close to the main informant which may be the case through the alleged RE/MAX office connection.” “As we’ve discussed, the RCMP’s hands would have been tied and remain tied because the main informant would have absolute informer privilege with the RCMP that could not ever been shared with the Saanich PD.” None of this would have logically led to the Zailos being “cleared”, or anyone else for that matter.“
The police strongly suspecting or knowing this would also fit with the RCMP handler Sherry Gaboury-Wigley apparently being cavalier with the identity of the informant, as though she didn’t have a lot of respect for the person and perhaps wanted the SPD to find out who it was indirectly.” As for a police informant arranging for the murder of an innocent person, the only way for the true informant to have taken heat off themselves with any degree of finality was to ensure that the false informant was convincingly believed to be the actual informant and also that they ended up dead. There could be no loose ends on this point.
So, while the actual informant may HAVE NOT arranged it per se, they knew by falsely identifying Lindsay as the true informant that they were sending her to her death.
They also may have, as we discussed, “served Lindsay up” meaning getting her to a suitable location at the right time to have her killed. On this point, we can only speculate how the main informant convincingly served Lindsay up. This goes to your point about her visiting the drug stash house in Calgary which I’ll address below.
Whether the police knew this is an interesting question. They ought to have had serious suspicions. As we’ve discussed, the RCMP’s hands would have been tied and remain tied. The SPD is a different matter. While they wouldn’t have ever been able to rely on the fact of the identification of the main informant, they could put the pieces of the puzzle together. None of this would have logically led to the Zailos being “cleared”. It’s almost like they’re operating in an environment of fear around the Zailos.
This all connects to your comments about the Delalcazars. Somehow Dateline got that info, but Zander Sherman didn’t seem to be told the same thing? Regardless, if it’s a fact, then it would provide an important piece of evidence on how the information about the drug stash how got back to a female informant living in Victoria, someone who wasn’t Lindsay but would have been connected enough to her that Lindsay may have shared what she saw there.
Then it was used against her. If this woman is a sociopath/psychopath and if she is the main informant, she would not have cared about the use of that information to her own advantage ultimately putting Lindsay Buziak at risk. But once the cartel was hot on the trail of a female in Victoria, the main informant had to pin it on LB.
THERE’S BEEN A LOT OF CHATTER ABOUT A FORMER RCMP DETECTIVE BLOGGER (GR) WHO CLAIMED TO HAVE INSIDE INFORMATION ABOUT THE CASE
but said he couldn’t disclose what he knows for fear of jeopardizing the case. Seriously? He shut the Lindsay page of his blog down about 2 years ago, though some of his writings about the case is still floating around out there. GR claimed that the real informant “double crossed the Sinaloa cartel” and wanted to put the blame on Lindsay. Well, I certainly agree with that statement. Then he went on and promised to broker deals for persons involved in the murder if they came to him.
Is that the way a professional former RCMP member would behave? I’m quite certain the Saanich Police nor the RCMP would have given him the go-ahead to broker deals. He focused his broker deal offer on Lindsay’s close friend, the part-time receptionist in the Re/Max office, and he publicly harassed her for months on end. That girl took such a beating from the Saanich Police and GR she finally up and left town. She is living in Europe now and has built quite a nice life for herself.
Just how do you think this guy came up with the idea that the “real informant” double crossed the Sinaloa Cartel? Shirley Zailo maybe? GR confronted her on who in her office did she think might be the real informant. She went on to name a few women in her office, a quick deflection to a question she could not honestly answer? Yeh, she set this guy up good, and he hung onto every word that came out of her mouth. On his blog he let everyone know that the Zailos were innocent of having any involvement in Lindsay’s murder. Today, GR is the trusted loyal friend to the “alleged real informant”. Well, everyone needs a friend, right?
What is needed here is someone within the Saanich Police Department or the RCMP to do the right thing and speak up about what they know. Well wait a minute, careers & pensions are at stake so that’s not likely to happen. The informant’s handler Sherry spilled the beans two years ago and nothing came of that, and the cover-up continued. At this point in time, I believe only the Attorney General Niki Sharma has the power to investigation the corruption that has been going on in this investigation and whether she would want to take that on is another story.
If you think cover-ups and corruption ISN’T real – think again. It’s happening throughout this country every day.
SIMONE SANDERSON WAS A POLICE INFORMANT BEFORE SHE WAS MURDERED
She also said police have not bothered to seize surveillance footage from a home where Simone was seen that day. Duncan also said Simone told family she had been forced to become a police informant after crack cocaine was found in her apartment in spring 2012, which could suggest a motive for the slaying. “We believe there is a cover up. We have serious concerns about the police investigation,” she said.
Investigator Janie Duncan (left) and Betty Ann Sanderson speak to reporters on Wednesday, at the location where 23-year-old Simone Sanderson’s body found in the city’s North End. (Jillian Taylor/CBC) “What we are here to say is that the Winnipeg police investigation was seriously flawed, and we will be continuing our investigation in hopes of finding the true killer.” However, Sanderson and other family members appeared to contradict that suggestion.
Simone Sanderson’s family has ‘serious concerns’ about police investigation | CBC News
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