Gay men are vanishing in Toronto again

The Toronto Police Criminal Investigations Bureau (CIB) has set up a special taskforce to investigate men going missing from the vicinity of the city’s gay village.

Toronto’s CIB task force will specifically be investigating whether two missing person cases are linked.

It will investigate the missing case of Andrew Kinsman, missing for just over a month, and Selim Esen who went missing in April.

Both men went missing near the town’s gay village and are both in their 40s.

This new task force comes as a meme with 11 missing people posters has spread online fueling speculation of a wider conspiracy.

Five of the 11 men featured in this meme have been found safe, and one has died in an apparent suicide.

One of the men is a prominent member of the community

Andrew Kinsman is well-known in the local LGBTI community for his advocacy work. He works as a staff member for the Toronto HIV/AIDS Network.

The 49-year-old went missing over a month ago on 26 June, a move his friends have described as out of character.

He was last seen when returning home from a Pride event.

A friend, who police believe to be the last one to have seen him said, Kinsman was ‘happy and upbeat.’

Chris, a local gay resident who didn’t wish to give his last name, told Gay Star News:

‘Police are saying they may not be connected. But the public feel they might be.

‘Folks here are definitely talking about it.

‘We all know Andrew so it’s really concerning. He’s a lovely guy.

‘I fear as it happened over Pride it might be foul play or a hook up gone bad.’

Are the disappearances linked?

Another man Selim Esen has been missing since April. Forty-three-year old Esen’s disappearance had flown relatively under the radar until recently.

Police say both Esen and Kinsmen ‘are members of the Church Wellesley community,’ known locally as the gay village.

The Torontoist reports, Detective Sergeant Michael Richmond says the main link between the cases is that both men were ‘very active on social media.’

They explain this can be understood as ‘frequent users of gay cruising apps, such as Grindr, Scruff, and Hornet.’

Speaking to City News, Police say although there is no evidence that they are linked, they can’t rule out that they are either.

This is not the first time the Toronto LGBTI community has been on edge…

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