This is sad. Jay did nothing at all to be killed. Its unfourtune that sickos like that guy have to kill innocent people.
Jamie Zois is Dorito? on Habbo.ca
He will be greatly missed
http://www.thestar.com/News/GTA/article/289160Gagged and locked inside a closet by a killer who had propped a chair under the door handle, Tommy Zois was helpless as he listened to his 14-year-old brother Jamie moaning and dying of stab wounds in the second-storey apartment.
Tommy's older sister, 22-year-old Iliada Zois, known as Lois to her family and friends, was already dead, brutally attacked by an enraged man who police say was her common-law spouse.
It was Christmas Day. Tommy, who is 16, would spend 30 hours trying to kick the door open and chew through the gag, his arm sliced and stomach punctured by a knife. He was told if he left he'd be killed.
On Wednesday, just before 7 p.m., the teen finally escaped and fled the highrise building at 2737 Kipling Ave. Less than a kilometre away on Finch Ave. W. is 23 Division, which is where Tommy arrived bleeding and with a horror story to tell.
He directed police to the bloodied apartment his sister shared with her boyfriend, Det. Sgt. Gary Grinton of the homicide squad told a news conference yesterday at the same police station.
"It was a nasty, bloody scene," he told reporters.
The violence erupted after the couple began arguing, Grinton said. He declined to say what started the feud.
Jamie and Tommy had arrived at Apt. 217 to spend some time celebrating Christmas Day with the couple but grew concerned when the fighting escalated. Jamie was attacked as he tried to run for the door.
But Grinton said he was no longer looking for a killer. At 6 a.m. yesterday, a man called 911 and surrendered to police. He was suffering from knife wounds to the stomach. Grinton would not say if the wounds were self-inflicted. It is expected he will make a court appearance sometime today.
The Zois family is numb and in a state of disbelief, said Marg Davidson, who is aunt to Lois, Tommy and Jamie, the daughter and sons of her sister Sandy and ex-husband Chris. The pair also have another son.
Tommy was treated in hospital where he received 30 surgical staples to close his wounds and was released into the care of his family.
"It's still hard to accept. It's surreal," Davidson said yesterday.
She spoke with her niece just before Christmas and everything seemed okay.
"She had three jobs. She always had money in the bank and took good care of her siblings," Davidson said of her niece. "Lois worked so hard I told her `You need to get a life, girl.'"
She worked in the fabric section at Wal-Mart in Thornhill. A recent internal newsletter features Lois on the front cover with six other sales associates that she had posted on her Facebook page.
A spokesperson for Wal-Mart said the retailer doesn't comment when a police investigation is under way "out of respect for the process."
Davidson said she wasn't aware of any physical abuse in the past and Grinton said he was not aware of police ever being called to the apartment.
It appears the young woman was extremely active online, posting dozens of photographs of herself and revealing many details about her life.
"It's complicated," appears in her Facebook profile beside "relationship status."
There appears to be no obvious picture of the man now accused of killing her.
The profile also says she graduated from Wilfrid Laurier Collegiate Institute and that she was enrolled in a child psychology course at Centennial College.
Lois was also passionate about music, and would call radio stations to chat with on-air announcers. She was a rabid fan of pop duo Savage Garden and its singer, Darren Hayes.
Her little brother Jamie was also quite active on the Internet. His aunt said he was a quiet, shy boy who stood a few inches over five feet and was in Grade 9.
According to his profile, his activities include "computer, bike riding, chilling with friends" while his interests are listed as girls.
Nana Yaw, 27, is charged with two counts of second-degree murder, one count of attempt murder and one count of forcible confinement. Grinton said he made "metal brackets" for a living.
Lois and Jamie Zois are Toronto's 83rd and 84th homicides of the year.
The record is 89, set in 1991.