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The Disappearance and Deaths of Chelsea Poorman, Noelle O’Soup, Tatyanna Harrison
⚠️ What You’ll Learn in This Episode:
How police failed to act when Chelsea, a disabled woman, went missing—and why her body was later found in a $10M mansion’s backyard.
Why Noelle O’Soup’s body sat undiscovered in a Downtown Eastside apartment—months after police had already entered the room.
The chilling details behind Tatyanna Harrison’s body being found on a yacht, half-dressed, with GHB in her system—and no one investigated further.
Each case reveals what experts are calling a “zone of impunity” for predators targeting Indigenous women in Vancouver and beyond.
Despite public inquiries like the one following serial killer Robert Pickton, these tragedies show that little has changed—and the system continues to fail.
This Is More Than Tragedy—It’s a Pattern
Three Questions This Podcast Asks You to Consider:
When the police call a woman’s death ‘not suspicious’—even when her skull is missing—what are they really saying?
Why are multiple Indigenous women ending up dead in close proximity—with no real investigations launched?
Is this ongoing failure the result of incompetence—or something more calculated?
By Marc Deveraux4.5
2525 ratings
The Disappearance and Deaths of Chelsea Poorman, Noelle O’Soup, Tatyanna Harrison
⚠️ What You’ll Learn in This Episode:
How police failed to act when Chelsea, a disabled woman, went missing—and why her body was later found in a $10M mansion’s backyard.
Why Noelle O’Soup’s body sat undiscovered in a Downtown Eastside apartment—months after police had already entered the room.
The chilling details behind Tatyanna Harrison’s body being found on a yacht, half-dressed, with GHB in her system—and no one investigated further.
Each case reveals what experts are calling a “zone of impunity” for predators targeting Indigenous women in Vancouver and beyond.
Despite public inquiries like the one following serial killer Robert Pickton, these tragedies show that little has changed—and the system continues to fail.
This Is More Than Tragedy—It’s a Pattern
Three Questions This Podcast Asks You to Consider:
When the police call a woman’s death ‘not suspicious’—even when her skull is missing—what are they really saying?
Why are multiple Indigenous women ending up dead in close proximity—with no real investigations launched?
Is this ongoing failure the result of incompetence—or something more calculated?

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