Close X
Friday, November 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. court hears closing arguments in 1983 murder

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Nov, 2020 08:20 PM
  • B.C. court hears closing arguments in 1983 murder

Judges in the British Columbia Appeal Court are hearing closing arguments from defence lawyers for a man who says he wrongly spent 37 years in prison for a crime he did not commit.

Phillip Tallio pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of his 22-month-old cousin in 1983 but testified last month that he did not understand what that meant.

Tallio was 17 at the time and has said he was checking on the little girl when he found her dead in a home in the northern community of Bella Coola.

His defence team told the court it should consider fresh evidence and that two other possible suspects could have been responsible for the little girl's death.

Tallio's lawyer at the time testified last month that he explained the plea deal to the teen, who seemed to grasp that he was admitting to killing Delavina Mack.

The court has heard Mack had been sexually assaulted, but Tallio's lawyers say DNA evidence does not definitively point to him as the perpetrator.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now
In a new ruling, Federal Court of Appeal Justice David Stratas has sided with the Trudeau government in extending the life of the Safe Third Country Agreement.

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now

Feds split housing funds between big cities

Feds split housing funds between big cities
Canada's biggest city, Toronto, will get the lion's share of that funding pie with about $203 million.

Feds split housing funds between big cities

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'
Acknowledging frustrations around partial lockdowns and scrapped Halloween plans in some parts of the country, Trudeau said Tuesday that Canadians need to gird themselves for a "tough winter ahead."

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons
Federal correctional investigator Ivan Zinger says there are three known cases of doctor-assisted death in federal prisons and each raises questions around consent, choice and dignity.

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C
Nanaimo RCMP say an officer was called to a doughnut shop on Sunday when staff reported someone had just spray-painted the shop floor.

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C

B.C. brings in more COVID restrictions

B.C. brings in more COVID restrictions
Dr. Bonnie Henry says gatherings are now limited to those in an immediate household, plus their safe six -- although in some homes even six guests may be too many.

B.C. brings in more COVID restrictions