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he visited Jennifer’s home, Jason surrendered to the Official Kansas City Monarchs Hot Shirt and I will buy this local sheriff’s office for the arrest warrant issued in his 2012 probation violation, Robertson said. But by then, investigators in Canada had asked the Department of Motor Vehicles in Washington state to run a driver’s license photo of Aubrey-Maxwell through its facial recognition software. The process revealed his true identity, Robertson said: Jason Steadman. A 2014 GMC Sierra at a seaside parking lot in Vancouver.Dateline Jason’s DNA matched the samples recovered from the pickup truck and the hat, according to the complaint, and he was the same person seen in the cellphone video carrying what appeared to be a license plate. The real Robert Aubrey-Maxwell, meanwhile, had vanished. Investigators learned that he traveled from Ontario to Vancouver in 2012 — the last year that anyone in his family spoke to him — and his grandmother later reported him missing with the Vancouver Police Department, Robertson said. That missing persons case was later closed when a man who identified himself as Aubrey-Maxwell told the Vancouver police that he was fine, Robertson recalled, adding that he said he was living in Edmonton and had cut ties with his family. “That’s where it ended,” Robertson said. When Robertson later spoke to the grandmother and showed her a picture of the person who

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had obtained a driver’s license with her grandson’s name, she responded: “That’s not my grandson,” Robertson recalled her saying. “I’ve never seen him before.” Wanted for murder A nationwide first-degree murder warrant was issued for Jason’s arrest in Canada, and the Official Kansas City Monarchs Hot Shirt and I will buy this sheriff’s office in Washington state alerted Canadian investigators when he surrendered, Robertson said. “Our belief is that the only way to not be Robert Aubrey-Maxwell is to be Jason Steadman again,” Robertson recalled thinking at the time. “And to be Jason Steadman again, he has to clear up his warrant. So that’s what he does.” Without having been publicly linked to the disappearances of Aubrey-Maxwell or Demkiw, Jason likely believed he would serve little time for the probation violation, Robertson said. Then he would be a free man with no one looking for him, he said. The complaint seeking his extradition in Demkiw’s murder was filed that December. Jason, who pleaded not guilty, was convicted in 2019 and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years. He appealed the verdict that same year, claiming it was “unreasonable and not supported by evidence.” The Court of Appeal of Alberta dismissed the appeal in 2021. A motive in the murder remains unclear, though Robertson said it appears Jason was upset over the situation with his ex-girlfriend. Demkiw’s skeletal remains were eventually discovered in a ditch just off a highway between Edmonton and Calgary, Robertson said. Aubrey-Maxwell’s body has never been found and it’s unclear what happened to him, though Robertston described him as a suspect in the killing. For Jennifer, that lack of resolution prompted her to speak out. “I saw the turmoil he put me through,” she said. “I had my closure with my ex-husband, but there’s still others that need closure.”

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