
"When Savannah Rose Kulla-Davies drove off to meet her ex-partner on Tuesday, her father says he had no idea that would be the last time he would see her. I wouldn't have let her go, he told CBC Toronto in an interview on Friday. I miss her terribly. And I don't see that changing anytime soon. Kulla-Davies, 29, was shot dead that day in the parking lot of a Brampton, Ont., plaza. Her ex-partner, Anthony Deschepper, 38, allegedly killed her before abducting their 17-month-old daughter,"
"Kulla-Davies got a drink from Starbucks and then made her way to the Brampton plaza to meet her ex-partner, said her brother, Spencer Porter. Now, it's in that plaza that flowers are piling up in her memory. The purpose of seeing Deschepper was to allow him to spend time with their daughter again, her father said. That probably shows a bit of Savannah's character," Davies said. "Even though they were not together, she still wanted to make her daughter available to the girl's father."
"Her father and brother said Kulla-Davies was passionate about dance and worked as a social worker for Peel Region before she became a mother of four children. "She decided that motherhood was going to be her thing. And that's what she's done very successfully." "She loved being a mom and now she can't be a mom," Davies said. Savannah Rose Kulla-Davies had four children. Her father and brother say she loved being a mother. (Savannah Kulla/Facebook)"
Savannah Rose Kulla-Davies, 29, was shot dead in a Brampton plaza after driving to meet her ex-partner. Her ex-partner, Anthony Deschepper, 38, allegedly killed her, abducted their 17-month-old daughter, triggered an Amber Alert, and was later fatally shot by police in Niagara Falls. Family members describe Tuesday as initially normal; Kulla-Davies stopped at Starbucks before arriving at the plaza. Kulla-Davies was a passionate dancer and former Peel Region social worker who dedicated herself to motherhood and had four children. Family members plan to petition the court to become guardians of the youngest child.
Read at www.cbc.ca
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