In early December, one of Stefoff's spiritual advisers, William Ames, claimed that he had found a witness who could supposedly exonerate Stefoff – that man was William Irving, a foreman for the
Canadian Northern Railway who claimed the convict had gone to apply for a job at his workplace when the crime was supposedly committed. Nothing came out of his claim, and the execution was allowed to proceed. On December 23, 1909, Stefoff was
hanged at the
Don Jail in Toronto. Just an hour prior to his execution, he suddenly confessed to one of his advisers, John Kolesnikoff, that he was responsible for the murders of three other men committed in the United States. While he did not give him much details about them, he claimed in 1904, while living in either
Terre Haute or
Bedford, Indiana, he had shot an
Englishman during a dispute at the boarding house they were living in, but was shielded by fellow Macedonians when authorities came to investigate. He then fled the country and spent some time travelling across Europe, but returned after two years to escape the authorities for crimes committed in his homeland. Not long after, he killed two fellow Macedonians in
Akron, New York and left their bodies in a box car, before again fleeing the country and settling in Toronto. It was supposed that if his execution was
stayed or he was found not guilty, he would likely be extradited to the U.S. to face murder charges there. His final reported words, spoken in his native language, were: "I'm guilty. I murdered that man.", referring to the murder of Simoff. ==See also==