Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Appeal Court Orders New Trial For B.C. Man Found Guilty In Double Murder In Langley and Surrey

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 May, 2015 07:29 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's top court has ordered a new trial for a man convicted of killing two people, ruling a judge did not consider a former co-accused's "considerable motive to lie" in a video played for the jury.
     
    Robert Bradshaw was sentenced to life in prison on two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of Laura Lamoureux and Marc Bontkes, killed five days apart in Langley and Surrey, B.C., in 2009.
     
    A B.C. Court of Appeal decision released Tuesday found the judge should not have admitted a videotaped statement in which the former co-accused, Roy Thielen, implicated Bradshaw.
     
    "Mr. Thielen had given a number of inconsistent statements. The difficulty was that it was not possible, on its face, to determine which statement was the truth and which was a lie," wrote Justice Elizabeth Bennett for the three-member panel.
     
    Thielen was the target of a "Mr. Big" investigation, during which he initially told an undercover officer he had been hired by a drug dealer to kill both victims and was the sole shooter.
     
    He later told an officer posing as a crime boss that Bradshaw was involved, and he set up two meetings with Bradshaw that were covertly recorded by police.
     
    Thielen was arrested in July 2010 and charged with two counts of first-degree murder and a third unrelated count of attempted murder.
     
    In August 2010, Thielen performed a so-called "re-enactment" of the murders on camera for police. In the video, he said he shot Lamoureux while Bradshaw waited in a car, and days later, Bradshaw shot Bontkes with the same gun.
     
    Prior to Bradshaw's trial in 2012, Thielen was allowed to plead guilty to two counts of second-degree murder and the charge of attempted murder was dropped, according to the appeal decision.
     
    The Crown successfully argued for the video to be included in Bradshaw's trial when Thielen refused to testify.
     
    In his testimony, Bradshaw denied any involvement in the murders. He said any incriminating statements he made during covertly recorded meetings were part of a "role play" that Thielen urged him to take on to impress the fictional crime boss.
     
    The appeal panel ruled Tuesday that the judge should not have admitted the re-enactment video because it did not meet the high threshold of trustworthiness needed for hearsay evidence.
     
    The video should not have been played for the jury without cross-examination of Thielen, wrote Bennett.
     
    "The judge did not sufficiently address the issues that would detract from the truthfulness of Mr. Thielen's statements, including his considerable motive to lie to extricate himself from his admissions ... that he committed first-degree murder."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Report Of Violent Confrontation In West Vancouver Home Before Man's Death: Police

    Report Of Violent Confrontation In West Vancouver Home Before Man's Death: Police
    ANCOUVER — A 55-year-old man has been arrested after what police are calling a suspicious death in a West Vancouver home. Several charges are being considered, and the victim is a 42-year-old man.

    Report Of Violent Confrontation In West Vancouver Home Before Man's Death: Police

    RCMP Went To The Internet To Make Fake Bombs Realistic In B.C. Terrorism Case

    RCMP Went To The Internet To Make Fake Bombs Realistic In B.C. Terrorism Case
    VANCOUVER — A small fraction of the C4 plastic explosive sought by a couple accused of plotting to blow up the B.C. legislature would have been enough to cause serious damage, a jury has heard.

    RCMP Went To The Internet To Make Fake Bombs Realistic In B.C. Terrorism Case

    B.C. Firefighters Return From Grim Devastation Of Nepal Earthquake

    B.C. Firefighters Return From Grim Devastation Of Nepal Earthquake
    RICHMOND, B.C. — On their third day in earthquake-stricken Nepal, a bus of volunteer firefighters wound around hills and hairpin turns on a makeshift single-lane road through rural villages pancaked by the disaster.

    B.C. Firefighters Return From Grim Devastation Of Nepal Earthquake

    Talks To Continue After BC Rail Buys Coal Licences In 'Sacred' Area: B.C.

    VICTORIA — Sixty-one disputed licences to mine coal will be bought by a Crown corporation in an area of northwestern British Columbia consider sacred by First Nations, says Mines Minister Bill Bennett.

    Talks To Continue After BC Rail Buys Coal Licences In 'Sacred' Area: B.C.

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster
    VICTORIA — Alaska's Lt.-Gov. Byron Mallott says he wants to see up close the aftermath of the Mount Polley tailings-pond collapse, including evidence of British Columbia's commitment to preventing a similar mining disaster.

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know
    TORONTO — A parent-led campaign to keep children home from class in protest of Ontario's new sexual-education curriculum gained early traction on Monday as at least one school reported that nearly all of its students were absent.

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know