On a winter day in 2015, Erin Maranan logged on to her computer at a police detachment in Toronto's northwest corner, a trove of confidential information at her fingertips.
A temporary civilian employee, Maranan had access to information classified by police as "highly restricted." The job represented a sharp turn on her vocational path, which had included stints as a model, a personal trainer and a yoga instructor.
The petite woman with long, black hair keyed in the name "Victor Oliveira." Up came a summary of a recent Highway Traffic Act ticket, which provided personal information including the licence plate number and description of his vehicle.
Seven months later, Oliveira was fatally shot as he sat in his white Range Rover outside a restaurant near Pearson Airport.
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