Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Man Killed Wife, Took Daughters To Church Before Smothering Them: Court

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Sep, 2019 10:14 PM

    KELOWNA, B.C. - A man who murdered his wife during an argument about his drinking then took his daughters to church before smothering them was sentenced Monday to 35 years in prison before he's eligible for parole.

     

    Jacob Forman pleaded guilty earlier this month to the second-degree murder of his wife Clara Forman on Dec. 17, 2017, and to two charges of first-degree murder in the deaths of seven-year-old Yesenia and eight-year-old Karina.

     

    "He said (during a confession to police), he thought it would be better for them to go home to heaven than to grow up in a world where daddy had killed mommy," Crown prosecutor Murray Kaay told B.C. Supreme Court during Forman's sentencing hearing.

     

    GRAPHIC WARNING: This story contains details that may disturb some readers.

     

    Kaay said Forman killed his wife by hitting her with a sledgehammer. The court heard the woman's last words, after the second of three blows, were "What are you doing?"

     

    After telling the girls to put on their pyjamas and letting them watch Netflix, Forman told his daughters he wanted to "play a game" with them, Kaay said.

     

    First, he took Yesenia to her bedroom and choked her from behind. "He continued to choke her until her heart stopped," Kaay said

     

    Forman also used a child's toy, a horse's head on a stick, to apply pressure to Yesenia's throat, he said.

     

    After murdering Yesenia, Forman killed Karina the same way, Kaay said.

     

    Forman, who owned a .22 calibre rifle, then spent several hours contemplating suicide, but decided against it, the court heard.

     

    Justice Allan Betton sentenced Forman to consecutive life sentences, 25 years without parole for the deaths of his daughters and 10 years without parole for the murder of his wife.

     

    "This breach of trust of such young children, vulnerable and trusting of their father, was horrific," Betton told the court.

     

    Including the two years he's been in custody since his arrest, Forman will not be eligible for parole until 2051, when he is 68 years old.

     

    The court heard Forman went to work as usual the day after the murders and bought cleaning supplies on the way home to try to remove bloodstains from the master bedroom, Kaay said.

     

    When Clara didn't show up for work on Dec. 19, friends twice called the Forman's residence. On the first call, Forman said his wife wasn't feeling well, the court heard. The second time, he said Clara had left him and taken the children.

     

    One of those friends called police, who went to the home and were denied entry as Forman told them Clara had left him, the court heard.

     

    When police returned to search the home, the court heard they found the bodies in the garage.

     

    Forman had originally pleaded not guilty when his trial began earlier this month. His defence lawyer said after the guilty plea that Forman believed his self-described acute alcoholism would offer him a defence.

     

    In murdering his children, Forman demonstrated the "most egregious breach of trust imaginable," Kaay told Judge Allan Betton.

     

    "Mr. Forman killed his daughters in their own bedroom, which should be a place of safety."

     

    Forman's assertion that he killed his wife in a fit of anger and then murdered his children because he didn't want them to grow up knowing he was a murderer "can only be described as narcissistic and selfish to a degree which defies comprehension." Kaay said. "He killed his children in a callous, cowardly manner."

     

    Defence lawyer Raymond Dieno had asked the court to impose a sentence of 25 years without chance of parole, the automatic term for a first-degree murder conviction.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Killer And Robber Who Escaped From Victoria-area Prison Now Back In Custody

    METCHOSIN, B.C. - RCMP say two potentially dangerous inmates who escaped from a minimum-security prison on Vancouver Island have been recaptured.

    Killer And Robber Who Escaped From Victoria-area Prison Now Back In Custody

    Canadian Sikh Group Sues Indian Government For $2.5 Million In Defamation

    A Toronto-based Sikh advocacy organization is suing the Indian government for $2.5 million following Indian-media stories alleging Canadian Sikhs are behind a new campaign of violence in the state of Punjab.

    Canadian Sikh Group Sues Indian Government For $2.5 Million In Defamation

    B.C.’s First Mental Health, Substance Use Urgent Care Response Centre Opens In Surrey Memorial Hospital Campus

    People who need urgent mental health and addictions care in the growing community of Surrey can now be referred to a central location for help.

    B.C.’s First Mental Health, Substance Use Urgent Care Response Centre Opens In Surrey Memorial Hospital Campus

    MEET THE CHAMPIONS: Surrey Soccer Team Brings Home Gold!

    Huge win for CCB Lions Boys U-18 soccer team as they take first place at the Les Sinnott Memorial Boys Provincial B Cup Soccer Championships held in Prince George this weekend. 

    MEET THE CHAMPIONS: Surrey Soccer Team Brings Home Gold!

    New Roving Counterattack Stops More Impaired Drivers In Delta

    CounterAttack is a fixture on BC roads during the summer, with police setting up roadblocks throughout the province, typically on weekend nights, to stop and deter impaired drivers. 

    New Roving Counterattack Stops More Impaired Drivers In Delta

    Flood Warning On B.C.'s Chilcotin River Above Site Of The Fraser River Slide

    Flood Warning On B.C.'s Chilcotin River Above Site Of The Fraser River Slide
    A flood warning has been posted in British Columbia's southern Interior for the Chilcotin River following heavy rains.

    Flood Warning On B.C.'s Chilcotin River Above Site Of The Fraser River Slide