Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ashcroft, B.C., Resident Testifies He Watched Shovel Attack On Neighbour

The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2015 12:21 PM
  • Ashcroft, B.C., Resident Testifies He Watched Shovel Attack On Neighbour
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — An Ashcroft, B.C., resident who stepped outside for a smoke may have witnessed the beating death of his neighbour with a shovel, a murder trial has heard.
 
Gil Anderson testified in B.C. Supreme Court on Tuesday about what he saw and heard on June 2, 2014, the day a man is accused of fatally attacking his uncle.
 
Shane Gyoba, 29, is charged with second-degree murder in connection with the death of Ed Gyoba.
 
Court heard Anderson called police in the town west of Kamloops, B.C., just under an hour after he went outside for a morning cigarette and heard a shouting match.
 
It was just before 8:40 a.m. when Anderson, who lived across the street from Shane Gyoba's home, went to investigate the sounds by walking around the side of his house to the driveway.
 
He peered through bushes and saw two people on the man's front lawn, but couldn't quite see their faces, he testified.
 
"I saw the silhouette on the left attack the one on the right. The one on the right tried to defend itself and the one on the left pursued until the one on the right fell down," he said.
 
Anderson said he then saw the attacker pick up something from the ground and start swinging.
 
"I could see the long handle and I wasn't quite sure what it was until I heard the shovel, the first strike," he said.
 
He heard a garbled voice and a groan, then what he believed to be two more strikes.
 
"It was a reverberating metal sound and a loud thump."
 
Then there was silence, he said.
 
Anderson told court he was shaken and first convinced himself what happened wasn't real.
 
The man walked directly past Gyoba’s yard to bring his daughter to school, without looking at the scene, he said.
 
"I could hear the sound of digging as I walked by — the sound of the shovel moving earth."
 
After the man returned home he decided to call police.
 
"I think at that point I'd accepted what I'd seen," he said.
 
"I'd come to the conclusion that I actually did just see that — that somebody had been assaulted and beat with a shovel 20 feet away."
 
A police witness earlier testified investigators found a broken shovel on Gyoba's property.
 
The trial before judge alone is expected to wrap up next week.

MORE National ARTICLES

Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Fed Move Not To Help Ontario Create Pension Plan 'Purely Political'

Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Fed Move Not To Help Ontario Create Pension Plan 'Purely Political'
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Premier Kathleen Wynne says Prime Minister Stephen Harper is playing politics by refusing to co-operate with Ontario's new pension plan, and warns voters will question his motives in the upcoming election campaign.

Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Fed Move Not To Help Ontario Create Pension Plan 'Purely Political'

Man Convicted In Jane Creba Slaying Loses Appeal At Ontario's Highest Court

Man Convicted In Jane Creba Slaying Loses Appeal At Ontario's Highest Court
TORONTO — A man found guilty of manslaughter in the slaying of a Toronto teenager on Boxing Day nearly ten years ago has lost an appeal of his convictions.

Man Convicted In Jane Creba Slaying Loses Appeal At Ontario's Highest Court

Islamic State, Not Russia, Is The Conflict That Keeps New Defence Chief Awake

Islamic State, Not Russia, Is The Conflict That Keeps New Defence Chief Awake
Gen. Jonathan Vance, who took over as the country's 19th chief of defence staff on Friday, says the rise of an extremist state in the Middle East is not something that can go unchallenged by the West.

Islamic State, Not Russia, Is The Conflict That Keeps New Defence Chief Awake

Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly

Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly
OTTAWA — A federal panel given the job of recommending ways to improve health care across Canada is warning that the country's medicare system is aging badly.

Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly

Homicide Unit Takes Lead In Disappearance Of Missing Winnipeg Woman

Winnipeg police say they are at a loss to explain the disappearance of a 57-year-old woman despite an intensive six-day search.

Homicide Unit Takes Lead In Disappearance Of Missing Winnipeg Woman

Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan

Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan
Fire evacuees from La Ronge, one of the largest communities in northern Saskatchewan, are being allowed to go home.

Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan