Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

3 Versions Of What Happened From Damien Taylor Accused Of Killing Pregnant Girlfriend CJ Fowler

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2015 11:53 AM
  • 3 Versions Of What Happened From Damien Taylor Accused Of Killing Pregnant Girlfriend CJ Fowler
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A 24-year-old man accused of murdering his girlfriend has testified he awoke to see her dead on the grass and then fled in panic when he saw a red car approaching.
 
However, the account Damien Taylor gave a jury is his third version of events since the body of 16-year-old CJ Fowler was found by dog walkers in the Guerin Creek area on Dec. 5, 2012.
 
B.C. Supreme Court has heard that the pregnant teen had a concrete block on her chest and that her face and jaw were smashed in. 
 
Taylor is charged with second-degree murder in Fowler's death.
 
Her body was discovered hours after the pair had gone to hospital when Fowler complained of chest pains she believed were the result of using crystal meth.
 
An emergency room doctor has testified that he told Fowler and Taylor that she was pregnant and that they both appeared to welcome the news. Her previous pregnancy, three months earlier, had ended in a miscarriage.
 
When RCMP in Prince George interviewed Taylor, he told them he became separated from Fowler at the hospital early on Dec. 5, 2012, and went to the Greyhound depot, expecting she would join him.
 
In Kelowna, where he was arrested 13 month later, Taylor told RCMP he killed Fowler by accident. That admission came after hours of questioning and after Fowler's stepfather — whom Taylor called Poppa — was brought into the interview room.
 
Taylor also said then that he was trying to "scare her in a funny way" and cut her throat.
 
"She was bleeding out of her throat," he told police.
 
Taylor also said he used "the boulders that were there" to end her suffering.
 
However, that account, which Taylor now claims is false, doesn't fit with the facts of Fowler's death. A pathologist has testified she died from asphyxiation, likely from a blow to her face and jaw from a concrete block. Her throat was not slashed.
 
"I was forced to make a false confession," Taylor told court.
 
He also admitted, after being shown video of the couple outside Royal Inland Hospital, that he lied to police about leaving without her.
 
Taylor testified he lied to police because he was worried they would know he was high on crystal meth and would search his backpack for drugs.
 
He told court that the week before Fowler's death was consumed by selling and taking drugs, including cocaine, crystal meth and heroin.
 
When he was first intercepted by police in Prince George, Taylor wasn't told that his girlfriend was dead until he was in the interview room.
 
Court was shown a video of Taylor sobbing and saying, "No way, what happened?"
 
In his most recent version of events, Taylor told the jury that he and Fowler were outside the hospital, watching for anyone looking for them due to earlier threats.
 
However, Crown lawyer Alexandra Janse noted the pair was offered a room in the hospital overnight.
 
Taylor said they left the hospital and walked to the Greyhound depot after he smoked more crystal meth and heroin.
 
His next memory is of waking up and seeing Fowler on the ground, taking her pulse and finding her dead, he said, adding he ran after seeing a red car.
 
Taylor said he changed clothes in order to run faster, eventually arriving at the Greyhound station, where he took the bus north to Prince George.
 
"That's the only lie that's left, isn't it Mr. Taylor?" Janse said as she finished questioning him.

MORE National ARTICLES

Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime

Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime
Yaman Alqadri still remembers the emotionally draining and painful moments she suffered in the months before her arrival in Canada from Syria in April 2012. 

Yaman Alqadri, Syrian Woman Subjected To Beatings And Electric Shocks For Opposing Assad Regime

Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn

Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn
Oilfield security firms say they've been dealing with more troublemakers in recent months with the crude price cratering and bringing drilling activity and jobs down with it.

Security Firms Dealing With Uptick In Oilfield Theft, Vandalism Amid Downturn

Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus

Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus
The 15-year-old defendant is accused of pushing the older boy under the wheels of a moving school bus outside Sydney Academy last winter.

Trial To Resume For Boy Charged In Death Of Cape Breton Teen Who Fell Under Bus

Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force

Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force
A report of an aircraft distress call that prompted officials to close part of the Trans-Canada Highway in Alberta for a possible emergency landing has turned out to be false.

Reported Distress Call By Plane In Southern Alberta Not True: Air Force

Opposition Parties Warn Sale Of Hydro One Will Drive Electricity Rates Higher

The Progressive Conservatives and the New Democrats are opposed to the sale of Hydro One, warning it will lead to higher electricity prices.

Opposition Parties Warn Sale Of Hydro One Will Drive Electricity Rates Higher

Guy Turcotte, Quebec Doctor Set To Stand Trial A Second Time In The Deaths Of His Two Children

Jury selection is set to begin Monday in the second trial of a former Quebec cardiologist who is charged with first-degree murder in the slayings of his two children.

Guy Turcotte, Quebec Doctor Set To Stand Trial A Second Time In The Deaths Of His Two Children