"Mr. Big" is an undercover investigative procedure developed and used by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in order to elicit confessions from (mostly) murder suspects. The procedure consists of a police officer living undercover for a period of time, gradually gaining the trust of a suspect by getting them to aid in small criminal acts, and then eventually persuading them to share information and details on past crimes under the guise of building and maintaining more trust. The Mr. Big technique has been heavily criticised in Canada. Two of the youngest people to have been convicted due to a Mr. Big investigation are Atif Rafay and Sebastian Burns, who were 18-years-old when Atif's family were murdered and they became law enforcement's prime suspects. Atif and Sebastian had been best friends, going to school together in Vancouver, Canada. During the last half of his final year in high school, Atif's family relocated across the border to Washington due to his father's career. Not wanting to start over at a new school or graduate without his friends, Atif made the decision to stay behind and finish the school year in Vancouver. Later that summer, the two friends went to Washington together to visit the Rafay family. And on the night of July 14, 1994, just under a week after they first arrived, Atif's family were murdered in their home. His mother, father and disabled sister had been blugeoned to death. Police immediately suspected the boys of the crime, though they were adament they'd been out at a movie before heading home to discover the carnage. It didn't help their case that right after calling the police both boys were observed displaying what has been described as odd and nonchalant behaviour, or that the family shower drain was full of blood that had been attempted to be washed away and full of hair only consistent with Sebastian Burns, or that the boys soon fled back to Vancouver and began spending Atif's inheritance indiscriminately. That's where Mr. Big came into the case, and months later the boys both confessed to the triple homicide. Still, even after their confessions and arrests, Sebastian and Atif maintained their innocence, claiming they'd been coerced into confessing. After nearly a decade of challenging and messy extradition trials, the boys, now grown men, were convicted of three counts of aggravated murder and were sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in Washington's state penitentiary. While Sebastian has been in and out of trouble in prison, Atif Rafay continues to speak out about his innocence and hopes to appeal his conviction.











