Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Veteran Who Was 'Eerily Calm' After He Shot His Wife, 77, Handed Life Sentence

Darpan News Desk, 26 Jun, 2015 01:02 PM
    SAANICH, B.C. — A B.C. Supreme Court judge has ruled that a Saanich, B.C., veteran will be eligible for parole in 10 years for killing his 77-year-old wife.
     
    Joseph DesRoches pleaded guilty to second-degree murder last week for the shooting death of his wife, Rosa, last year.
     
    The court heard DesRoches was "eerily calm" after he shot his son's dog with a pistol he kept in the house, then walked upstairs and shot his wife as she lay in bed.
     
    Both Crown and defence lawyers sought the minimum sentence for second-degree murder of life in prison with no chance of parole for a decade.
     
    The lawyers  referenced the man's history of serving his country with the military, his previously clean record, and the fact that his children have forgiven him.
     
    His lawyer told the court during the sentencing hearing that DesRoches still doesn't know why he started shooting. (CFAX)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Officers Criticize Roll Out Of Carbines A Year After Three Officers Killed

    RCMP Officers Criticize Roll Out Of Carbines A Year After Three Officers Killed
    RCMP officers who raced to a New Brunswick neighbourhood under siege by Justin Bourque say the force has failed to supply them with recommended guns and training, months after a report urged the organization to do just that.

    RCMP Officers Criticize Roll Out Of Carbines A Year After Three Officers Killed

    Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals

    Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals
    Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, a person of Indian origin, has commemorated the 170th anniversary of the first arrival of East Indians in the island nation, saying that ethnic Indians were a privileged lot.

    Trinidad And Tobago Marks 170 Years Of Indian Arrivals

    Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory

    Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory
    Montreal's fashion sector is trying to regain some of its lost glory as designers, manufacturers and other players in the apparel industry unite in a bid to expand the city's sartorial footprint.

    Montreal Fashion Industry Suits Up, Uniting To Regain City's Lost Glory

    Activists Using Social Media To Fight Jihadists

    Activists Using Social Media To Fight Jihadists
    MONTREAL — A Montreal-based human rights think-tank wants to fight jihadist groups on their own online turf, saying it's time to push back against the propaganda.

    Activists Using Social Media To Fight Jihadists

    How Old-fashioned Volunteer Armies Use New Technology To Focus Campaign Efforts

    How Old-fashioned Volunteer Armies Use New Technology To Focus Campaign Efforts
    OTTAWA — Some 3,500 Liberal volunteers knocked on more than 200,000 doors in 190 ridings across the country last weekend.

    How Old-fashioned Volunteer Armies Use New Technology To Focus Campaign Efforts

    Canadian Journalist On Trial In Egypt Tries To Separate Himself From Employer

    Prosecutors are set to begin closing arguments Monday in the retrial of Mohamed Fahmy on widely-denounced terror charges.

    Canadian Journalist On Trial In Egypt Tries To Separate Himself From Employer