Anne Marie D'Amico, 30

(Jerrett Funeral Homes)

(Jerrett Funeral Homes)

'A generous heart'

Anne Marie D'Amico worked at Invesco, a U.S.-based investment firm with offices near the North York Civic Centre.



D'Amico enjoyed playing pool, softball and tennis. But those who knew her remembered her generous nature above all. She made time for others and volunteered at Live Different, helping to build homes for those less fortunate in the Dominican Republic.

"She wouldn't stop until she went the extra mile for others," the D'Amico family said in a statement to CBC News.

"She genuinely wanted to care for all those around her, even if it meant sacrificing a portion of herself in return for others' happiness."

Her brother Nick also spoke of D'Amico's compassionate nature in an emotional eulogy at her funeral on May 2.

"She brought so much warmth and comfort to others," he said. "She would go the extra mile showing she cared. She continually did things that had enormous impact because she did everything with her whole heart."

He went on to describe a time when, after a plate that his mother loved broke, his sister used one of the shards as a guide to hand paint the same design onto a new plate that she gave to her mother as a gift.

D'Amico graduated from Loretto Abbey Catholic Secondary School in the North York district of Toronto, as did another victim of the attack, Sohe Chung.