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Man charged in death of woman in Toronto's gay village denied bail

Richey's friends and family present in the courtroom smiled as the decision was read out
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Tess Richey, 22, was reported missing on Nov. 25. Her body was found four days later in an alleyway near the Church Street and Wellesley Street East — the bustling area at the heart of Toronto's gay village where Richey was last seen. (Supplied)

TORONTO — A man accused of killing a young woman who went missing in Toronto's gay village last year was denied bail today.

Kalen Schlatter, 21, is charged with first-degree murder in the November 2017 death of Tess Richey.

Richey, 22, was reported missing on Nov. 25 after a night out with a friend in Toronto's Church and Wellesley neighbourhood.

Her mother travelled from the family home in North Bay to search for her daughter and found Richey's body four days later in a stairwell at the back of an alley, just steps from where the young woman was last seen.

Police have said Richey died of "neck compression."

See: Missing North Bay woman found dead

Schlatter, whose bail hearing began last month, let out a sigh in court when Superior Court Justice Brian O'Marra announced his decision.

Richey's friends and family present in the courtroom smiled as the decision was read out.

The young woman's sisters later shared their thoughts about the decision on social media.

"I of course feel that the judge has made the correct decision in denying the accused bail," Varina Richey wrote in a statement posted on Twitter, adding that she would now like to focus her attention on her family and friends.

"Tears of joy and grief," Hailey Richey wrote in a Facebook post.

Some of Schlatter's family members who were in court on Monday wept and hugged each other after O'Marra's decision was delivered.

Schlatter was initially charged with second-degree murder in February but the charge was elevated to first-degree murder in March when new evidence emerged, police have said.

Police say Richey and Schlatter did not know each other prior to the night of her disappearance. They said Richey met Schlatter on the street after she and her friend left a bar.

Investigators also have said surveillance video released by investigators shows Schlatter and Richey together near the alley where her body was found by her mother.

Police faced public criticism for their failure to find Richey after her disappearance. In June two officers were charged with misconduct under the Police Services Act in connection with the case.

Richey's death, and several other disappearances connected to the gay village — eight of which resulted in first-degree murder charges against 66-year-old self-employed landscaper Bruce McArthur — led community members to say police were not adequately protecting them.

Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders announced in December that the force would review its handling of missing person cases.

Alanna Rizza, The Canadian Press