Justice delayed: victims anxious for stalled MMIW inquiry to give them voice
OTTAWA — For 16 years, Maggy Gisle thought her lot in life was to be a “junkie, a prostitute and a drug dealer.”
Now, Gisle — once known as “Crazy Jackie,” a fixture on the Downtown Eastside who would inject cocaine to suppress her nightmares of childhood sexual abuse — has returned to her old Vancouver haunts, this time with a more noble mission.
Gisle spends her own time and money collecting stories and input from others on the notorious strip, hoping to provide the material to the forthcoming national public inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women.
She counts herself among the growing ranks of aboriginal Canadians, advocates and family members who are growing frustrated and despondent about a lack of a clear timeline as to when they’re going to be able to share their testimony.


