‘Worst thing that could happen:’ Manitoba man sentenced for killing Indigenous woman
GODS LAKE NARROWS, Man. — A man has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for nearly 16 years for the killing of a young Indigenous mother, which shook many members of a remote fly-in First Nation in northern Manitoba.
Michael William Okemow, 40, was found guilty of second-degree murder in the 2015 beating death of Crystal Andrews, 22, at God’s Lake First Nation, a Swampy Cree and Metis community located about 1,000 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.
“Michael killing Crystal has had a very big effect on her family, on this community and beyond, because she is one of so many murdered Indigenous women,” said Justice Chris Martin in his sentencing delivered in the remote reserve earlier this month.
Andrews was a mother of two young children, a wife and a foster mother. Her killing went unsolved for more than two years before Okemow was arrested in 2018.