Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Jury Should Consider If Confession Details Came From Police, Media: Judge

The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2019 09:30 PM

    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia judge has told jurors they will have to decide whether a man who confessed to killing a 12-year-old girl could have obtained details about the crime from police or media reports.


    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Austin Cullen is instructing a jury that is expected to start deliberations later today in the trial of Garry Handlen, who confessed to the 1978 murder during a police undercover operation.


    Monica Jack was last seen in Merritt while riding her bike and her remains were discovered in the area 17 years later.


    Handlen became the subject of a so-called Mr. Big sting in early 2014 and provided an alleged confession recorded on a hidden camera and shown to the jury during the first-degree murder trial.


    Defence lawyer Patrick Angly has argued Handlen was provided information about the crime by the RCMP in 1978 when he was interviewed and also by a supposed crime boss asking leading questions.


    Angly has said the crime boss was referring to a newspaper article about the crime while trying to extract a confession in 2014, and Handlen could have read some information he parroted back and may also have known details about Jack’s murder from a television documentary.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Protests And Marches Sparked By RCMP Arrest At B.C. Pipeline Protest Camp

    Protests And Marches Sparked By RCMP Arrest At B.C. Pipeline Protest Camp
    The arrest of 14 people at an Indigenous blockade in a remote area of northern British Columbia became a flash point Tuesday that sparked protests across the country.

    Protests And Marches Sparked By RCMP Arrest At B.C. Pipeline Protest Camp

    Liberals Told To Rethink Child Care Policy To Claim To Be 'Feminist Government'

    The federal treasury is set to spend $7.5 billion over a decade to help fund child-care spaces across the country.

    Liberals Told To Rethink Child Care Policy To Claim To Be 'Feminist Government'

    Donation Bin-Related Deaths Prompt Manufacturer To Stop Production

    The manufacturer of clothing donation bins used by charities across Canada said Tuesday it has stopped producing the metal containers, which were involved in at least two recent deaths, while it works on coming up with safer designs.

    Donation Bin-Related Deaths Prompt Manufacturer To Stop Production

    Montreal Enlists Citizens, Workers And Revenue Department In Fight Against Airbnb

    Montreal Enlists Citizens, Workers And Revenue Department In Fight Against Airbnb
    On Monday, Mayor Valerie Plante asked residents to use a city hotline to report any lock boxes they see attached to public property, such as parking meters and bicycle racks.

    Montreal Enlists Citizens, Workers And Revenue Department In Fight Against Airbnb

    Defence Urges Jury To Find Man Guilty Of Manslaughter If It Believes Confession

    Angly continued to urge jurors to reject what he says was a false confession made to an undercover RCMP officer during a so-called Mr. Big operation.

    Defence Urges Jury To Find Man Guilty Of Manslaughter If It Believes Confession

    Wandering Seal Visits Southern Newfoundland Town, Seems Keen To Stay

    BURIN, N.L. — A wandering seal that parked itself in front of a southern Newfoundland hospital entrance over the weekend has been returned to the water — twice.

    Wandering Seal Visits Southern Newfoundland Town, Seems Keen To Stay