Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Teen Found Guilty Of Shooting German Tourist, Leaving Him Paralyzed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Oct, 2019 08:23 PM

    CALGARY - A youth has been found guilty of shooting a German tourist in the head on a highway west of Calgary last year.

     

    A judge convicted the boy from the Stoney Nakoda First Nation, who cannot be identified because he was 16 at the time, of aggravated assault and recklessly discharging a firearm.

     

    Court heard that Horst Stewin was driving a black SUV on the First Nation's land with his family when someone in a passing car shot him. His vehicle veered off the highway and crashed into some trees.

     

    Stewin survived and was transported back to Germany, where doctors removed eight bullet fragments from his brain.

     

    He is paralyzed on his right side, gets confused and has memory issues.

     

    "The Crown has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that (the accused) is the shooter," provincial court Judge George Gaschler said in his decision Friday.

     

    A sentencing hearing is to be held on Feb. 10.

    During the trial, the victim's wife told police the family was driving along the highway because her husband rides horses and was a fan of the western lifestyle.

     

    She said a vehicle passed by with its front passenger window rolled down, and a man wearing a ball cap shot her husband. She said she heard a 'pop' and smelled smoke before Stewin slumped forward.

     

    Three other people who were in the car testified that the teen was the shooter, although they said they had not actually watched him pull the trigger.

     

    Court heard the accused, who is now 17, had been sitting in the seat behind the car's driver. But the victim's wife said a man in the car's front passenger seat was the shooter.

     

    Defence lawyer Balfour Der argued that the Crown has failed to prove his client's guilt.

     

    He said the three witnesses who were in the car with his client had ulterior motives to blame him for the shooting, since he would face a lesser penalty as a young offender. No one else was charged in the case.

     

    The Crown said that when all the evidence is considered, it had completely proven its case against the teen.

     

    A number of other charges against the accused, including attempted murder, were earlier withdrawn.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    City Of Surrey Honours Orange Shirt Day

    “Orange Shirt Day is a time to acknowledge and remember the injustices of the past, and it is also a day to come together in a spirit of reconciliation,” said Mayor Doug McCallum. 

    City Of Surrey Honours Orange Shirt Day

    Peel Police Searching For Toronto Man Vatsal Khamar Involved In Huge $500,000 Real Estate Fraud

    Officers from the Fraud Bureau are currently investigating an incident that took place in 2016.

    Peel Police Searching For Toronto Man Vatsal Khamar Involved In Huge $500,000 Real Estate Fraud

    3 Suspects Sought After Man Held In Vehicle, Assaulted In Surrey

    Police are seeking to arrest Hashi Jama Jama, Hassan Avdirazak Shakib, and William Daniels-Sey

    3 Suspects Sought After Man Held In Vehicle, Assaulted In Surrey

    CBC Reporter's Sources Safe, For Now

    CBC Reporter's Sources Safe, For Now
    The Supreme Court of Canada has set aside an order that would have forced a journalist to reveal her confidential sources and has ordered the case back to a lower court for a second look.    

    CBC Reporter's Sources Safe, For Now

    Source Of Trudeau 'Brownface' Photo Says Only Motive Was Public's Right To Know

    Michael Adamson's statement said his decision to send a yearbook containing the photo to a reporter at Time magazine "was motivated solely by the belief that the Canadian public had a right to see it."

    Source Of Trudeau 'Brownface' Photo Says Only Motive Was Public's Right To Know

    Wages, Job Security Key In Tentative Deal For UVic Sessional Lecturers

    Wages, Job Security Key In Tentative Deal For UVic Sessional Lecturers
    VICTORIA - Hundreds of workers at the University of Victoria have a tentative contract that their union says addresses low wages and job security.    

    Wages, Job Security Key In Tentative Deal For UVic Sessional Lecturers