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Community Safety Alert: Murder Charge Laid in 2025 Bible Hill Homicide

RCMP investigation scene in Bible Hill, Nova Scotia related to 2025 homicide and subsequent second-degree murder charge

RCMP have charged a 49-year-old Bible Hill man with second-degree murder in connection with a 2025 homicide on Bomber Drive.

Community Safety Alert: Murder Charge Laid in 2025 Bible Hill Homicide

RCMP Charge Man Following 2025 Bible Hill Death Investigation

The RCMP Northeast Nova Major Crime Unit (NEN MCU) has laid a murder charge against a man in connection with the death of a woman in Bible Hill, Nova Scotia, originally investigated as a suspicious death in January 2025. The development follows a lengthy, multi-agency investigation into what was later confirmed to be a homicide.

On January 3, 2025, officers from Colchester County District RCMP were sent to a home on Bomber Drive in Bible Hill for a wellbeing check around 9:30 a.m. Inside, police found a deceased 42-year-old woman and an unconscious man. The man, later identified as Lee Andrew MacDonald, 49, of Bible Hill, was transported to hospital. The Nova Scotia Medical Examiner Service subsequently determined the woman’s death was a homicide, leading to an intensive major crime investigation.

Official RCMP Incident Details

Based on the official information released by the RCMP, the following key facts have been confirmed:

Arrest and Charges

After more than a year of investigative work, including forensic analysis and coordination between multiple agencies, RCMP have now laid charges.

Investigative Support and Context

The RCMP confirm that multiple policing and forensic partners have contributed to this file:

Investigators have stated that there is currently no evidence indicating this homicide is an incident of intimate partner violence. Police also acknowledge that information from the public played a role in advancing the investigation and leading to the arrest.

The RCMP file number for this case is 2025-10877. For residents seeking to understand broader crime patterns in the province, province-wide trends and data can be reviewed through resources such as Crime Statistics in Nova Scotia, which provide context for serious incidents like this homicide.

CrimeCanada.ca Safety Perspective

From the perspective of CrimeCanada.ca, incidents like this 2025 Bible Hill homicide underscore the importance of timely wellbeing checks, community vigilance, and robust investigative capacity across Nova Scotia. While a murder charge has now been laid, the impact on those who knew the victim, and on the wider community, can be long-lasting. Understanding how rare but serious crimes fit into the broader safety picture—using tools such as provincial and local data, including nearby community profiles like crime and safety statistics for East Hants, Nova Scotia—can help residents make informed decisions about personal and neighbourhood safety.

For community safety, CrimeCanada.ca encourages residents to promptly report concerns about a person’s wellbeing, unusual activity at a residence, or any information that could assist police in ongoing investigations. Quick calls for wellness checks, accurate information sharing, and cooperation with investigators can be crucial in preserving life and supporting successful prosecutions. Our mission is to support safer communities by connecting Canadians with clear incident summaries, safety information, and accessible data that help clarify risk without spreading fear.


Official Source & Community Safety

This safety alert is based on an official release from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). CrimeCanada.ca aggregates and analyzes this data to keep the nova-scotia community informed, aware, and safe. We are an independent safety data aggregator and not the original creators of the underlying incident report.

Read the full official release here: RCMP Official Statement.

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