Does pig farm hold key to city womans fate?
By RACHEL EVANS — Edmonton Sun It will be a tragic end to a tragic life if police scouring a B.C. pig farm confirm the death of Edmonton-born Georgina Papin, says an aunt who wants closure on her disappearance. Edmonton’s Pauline Papin said even though her niece Georgina was addicted to heroin, living on the Vancouver streets, and ill when they last spoke, she never would have gone over two years without calling if she were alive. But she hopes her niece didn’t meet a terrible end at the Port Coquitlam pig farm police are searching in relation to the cases of 50 missing Vancouver women – including Georgina. “I keep reading the paper, listening to the news ever since this,” said a tearful Papin, sister to the missing woman’s deceased father. “If she’s gone, at least it will be closure for the family instead of wondering if she’s alive or whatever happened to her.” Papin said she tried to report her niece – who’d be 37 now – missing to RCMP in 2000. “She kept in contact with me,” Papin