A year and a half after their bodies were discovered in their Old Colony Rd. home, Honey and Barry Sherman remain two out of 33 victims of unsolved murders committed in Toronto in 2017.

Unlike in many of the other cases, the couple’s public profile — Barry, the founder of pharmaceutical company Apotex and Honey, a well known philanthropist — launched the details surrounding their murders firmly into the public eye.

While investigators have likely withheld details of the investigation from the public, many aspects of the case and the investigation surrounding it are well known.

Here is Yahoo Canada’s summary of the ongoing investigation into the unsolved murders of Honey and Barry Sherman in December 2017, starting with the latest updates.

2019

July

In July 2019, one of the Shermans’ four grown children spoke about her experience for the first time since her parents’ murders in December 2017.

Sitting down with CBC’s The National, Alexandra Krawczyk said she, her brother and her two sisters live in fear for their safety and the safety of their families.

There is still a lot of uncertainty about who killed one of Canada’s wealthiest couples, as their killer or killers remain at large.

And Krawczyk told CBC that as long as that uncertainty remains, so does the fear that she and her siblings might be targets too.

"We don't know where the next target is, right? It's an alarming situation, and I feel that I do have to be on guard,” she said in on the show. “But that's not going to stop me from doing important work."

Despite living in fear, Krawczyk has been working to take up the baton of her parents’ philanthropic community work.

The family launched The Sherman Foundations earlier in 2019 in order to help oversee the projects her parents started.

In addition to continuing to help manage the millions of dollars in financial commitments her parents made to causes they supported, Krawczyk told CBC she has taken on more of a public role, representing the family at public community events.

"Right from the beginning I started meeting with people, trying to find out what was happening, what were the loose ends, what were the things that we could help with and keep working on," Krawczyk told CBC. "I'm taking it one step at a time, one meeting at a time. One step leads to the next, and I think I'm on the right path."

March

On March 7, Canadian media outlets reported on the Sherman family’s petition to demolish the Old Colony Road home.

According to CTV, the demolition request was scheduled to go before the North York Community Council in a meeting on March 19.

As of March 8, Honey and Barry Sherman were still listed along with 31 other people in Toronto whose murders in 2017 remain unsolved.

Below the sparse details of the investigation listed in their case files on the Toronto Police Service website is a heading for “additional Information.”

The only thing under that heading reads “no further information available.”

February

In a letter dated Feb. 11, a representative of the Sherman family petitioned the North York Community Council for permission to demolish the two-storey home at 50 Old Colony Rd where Honey and Barry Sherman were murdered.

The letter describes the “bad memories and a stigma” still attached to the house following unsolved the double homicide in December 2017.

“It pains them to have it sit there,” the letter says of the surviving family members. “No one will purchase the home as it presently stands.”

The letter also states Coun. Jaye Robinson, the city councillor for the ward where the home is located, has given her “blessing” to have it demolished.

View photos Barry and Honey Sherman. (United Jewish Appeal/Canadian Press) More

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