Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 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

    Weather Warnings Issued For Several Parts Of B.C., As New Storms Arrive

    Weather Warnings Issued For Several Parts Of B.C., As New Storms Arrive
    Environment Canada has posted snowfall, wind, winter storm and rainfall warnings for nearly two dozen regions across B.C., including Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley and large parts of Vancouver Island.

    Weather Warnings Issued For Several Parts Of B.C., As New Storms Arrive

    Little To No Proof Police Carding Has Effect On Crime Or Arrests: Ontario Report

    Little To No Proof Police Carding Has Effect On Crime Or Arrests: Ontario Report
    Police street checks widely known as carding have little to no value as a law enforcement tool and should be significantly limited across Ontario

    Little To No Proof Police Carding Has Effect On Crime Or Arrests: Ontario Report

    How Many Drug Users Who Od'd Have Brain Damage? Doctors Say Canada Needs Data

    How Many Drug Users Who Od'd Have Brain Damage? Doctors Say Canada Needs Data
    The latest figures available from the Public Health Agency of Canada say over 9,000 people fatally overdosed across the country between January 2016 and June 2018. British Columbia's coroners service recorded nearly a third of those deaths.

    How Many Drug Users Who Od'd Have Brain Damage? Doctors Say Canada Needs Data

    Vancouver To Play Host To Wines From Around The World For 41St Time

    Vancouver To Play Host To Wines From Around The World For 41St Time
    It's a sip that can take you across continents from sun-drenched California to the vineyards of Romania.

    Vancouver To Play Host To Wines From Around The World For 41St Time

    Vavenby, B.C., Water System Affected By Truck Crash For Second Time Since 2017

    Vavenby, B.C., Water System Affected By Truck Crash For Second Time Since 2017
    A truck veered into the North Thompson River early Sunday morning, about 31 kilometres north of Vavenby, potentially leaking diesel into the community water supply.

    Vavenby, B.C., Water System Affected By Truck Crash For Second Time Since 2017

    Heavy Snow, Poor Driving Conditions Along B.C.'s Northern Coasts, Yukon Border

    Heavy Snow, Poor Driving Conditions Along B.C.'s Northern Coasts, Yukon Border
    VANCOUVER — Winter storms will ring in the new year around British Columbia's north and central coasts and along the border with Yukon.

    Heavy Snow, Poor Driving Conditions Along B.C.'s Northern Coasts, Yukon Border