Cynthia Albena Audy
Cynthia Albena Audy, 27, was the mother of two children when she vanished from Winnipeg’s North End in October 2004. The Winnipeg Police Service’s investigation turned up no leads, and in July 2012, Project Devote took it on. Investigators last met with Audy’s sister, Angelita Stevens in the fall of 2014.
Stevens and Audy were together on the night that Audy was seen for the last time.
According to the Winnipeg Police Service (WPS) it was Oct. 28, 2004, but Stevens says that’s not the case. “They got the date wrong,” she said, exasperated. Stevens is frustrated because in the last two months she’s had to tell details of that night over and over to different investigators but they are not any closer to finding out what happened. She says it was after midnight on Sunday, Oct. 24, 2004 when the girls ran out of beer. She remembers the date for two reasons: It was the first time the two drank together and it was the last time they ever hung out. They were at Audy’s townhouse on Winnipeg’s Jarvis Avenue.
Audy told her she was going to run to the vendor to get beer, and she needed to make money on the way. She jumped into a three-seated, navy blue and grey Chevrolet pickup truck near the corner of Selkirk Avenue and Andrews Street. Stevens waited for her sister for hours, and when she didn’t return, she went home.
Days later, the WPS showed up to take her statement. Stevens says they told her that Audy’s boyfriend reported the 27-year-old’s disappearance.
In July 2012, the WPS handed the case to Project Devote, a Manitoba task force dedicated to investigating missing and murdered persons cases.
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Stevens and Audy were together on the night that Audy was seen for the last time.
According to the Winnipeg Police Service (WPS) it was Oct. 28, 2004, but Stevens says that’s not the case. “They got the date wrong,” she said, exasperated. Stevens is frustrated because in the last two months she’s had to tell details of that night over and over to different investigators but they are not any closer to finding out what happened. She says it was after midnight on Sunday, Oct. 24, 2004 when the girls ran out of beer. She remembers the date for two reasons: It was the first time the two drank together and it was the last time they ever hung out. They were at Audy’s townhouse on Winnipeg’s Jarvis Avenue.
Audy told her she was going to run to the vendor to get beer, and she needed to make money on the way. She jumped into a three-seated, navy blue and grey Chevrolet pickup truck near the corner of Selkirk Avenue and Andrews Street. Stevens waited for her sister for hours, and when she didn’t return, she went home.
Days later, the WPS showed up to take her statement. Stevens says they told her that Audy’s boyfriend reported the 27-year-old’s disappearance.
In July 2012, the WPS handed the case to Project Devote, a Manitoba task force dedicated to investigating missing and murdered persons cases.
Do you have any information on this case?
CBC needs you
Email [email protected]