Death Of Theresa Allore
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Theresa Allore was a nineteen-year-old Canadian college student who disappeared on Friday, November 3, 1978, from
Champlain College Lennoxville Champlain College Lennoxville is the Champlain Regional College campus serving the Eastern Townships (Estrie). The campus is located in the borough of Lennoxville, of Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada. Like the other campuses of Champlain Regional C ...
in the
Eastern Townships The Eastern Townships (french: Cantons de l'Est) is an historical administrative region in southeastern Quebec, Canada. It lies between the St. Lawrence Lowlands and the American border, and extends from Granby in the southwest, to Drummondv ...
of Quebec.


Circumstances

Theresa Allore was a nineteen-year-old student at Champlain College Lennoxville, Quebec, Canada. Her lodgings were in Compton, a fifteen-minute drive south. On November 3, 1978, she disappeared from the campus. Five months later, on April 13, 1979, her body was discovered in a small body of water approximately one kilometre from her dormitory residence in
Compton Compton may refer to: Places Canada * Compton (electoral district), a former Quebec federal electoral district * Compton (provincial electoral district), a former Quebec provincial electoral district now part of Mégantic-Compton * Compton, Que ...
, Quebec. She was wearing only her underwear. Upon her disappearance police initially suggested she was a runaway. When her body was discovered police then suggested that she was the possible victim of a drug overdose, perhaps with the assistance of fellow college students.


Developments

In the summer of 2002, the family of Allore enlisted the support of an investigative reporter and friend,
Patricia Pearson Patricia Pearson (born April 7, 1964) is a Canadian writer and journalist. She has published two novels and several works of nonfiction. Life and work Born in Mexico City, Pearson is one of five children of Canadian diplomat Geoffrey Pearson and ...
, who produced a series of articles for Canada's ''
National Post The ''National Post'' is a Canadian English-language broadsheet newspaper available in several cities in central and western Canada. The paper is the flagship publication of Postmedia Network and is published Mondays through Saturdays, with M ...
'' newspaper that presented evidence that she was a victim of murder, and that her death was possibly linked to multiple other unsolved local cases. The theory was supported by geographic profiler and then FBI consultant, Kim Rossmo, who suggested a serial sexual predator may have been operating in the Quebec region in the late 1970s and advised police to investigate the deaths as a series. Since 2002, Theresa's brother, John Allore, who produces the podcast ''Who Killed Theresa?'', has continued the investigation, identifying dozens of other unsolved murders and disappearances from 1971 to 1981 which may be associated. He successfully lobbied for the creation of a Sûreté du Québec cold case unit, which was created in 2004. Beginning in 2018, John Allore started to focus on other Quebec cases from the 1970s through the present era, cases that further suggest systemic failures in Quebec criminal justice. On January 17, 2019 the Montreal police, the Service de police de la Ville de Montréal, announced it was creating its own cold case squad, in large part due to the lobbying efforts of John Allore. In November 2018 John Allore was awarded the Senate of Canada’s Sesquicentennial Medal for his work in victims advocacy for "recognition of your valuable service to the nation." Allore and Pearson's book ''Wish You Were Here'' about the murder was published by Penguin Random House Canada in September 2020.


See also

* List of solved missing person cases: pre-2000 * List of unsolved murders (1900–1979)


References


Literature

* * * * *


External links

*
Who Killed Theresa? The Podcast
{{DEFAULTSORT:Allore, Thresea 1970s missing person cases 1978 crimes in Canada 1978 deaths 1978 in Quebec Deaths by person in Canada Formerly missing people Murder in Quebec Missing person cases in Canada Unsolved murders in Canada Women in Quebec