Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Brother Gives Victim Impact Statement At Bus Shelter Death Sentencing

The Canadian Press, 28 Apr, 2015 10:56 AM
    KENTVILLE, N.S. — A man has told a Nova Scotia court that he was in disbelief when he had heard his brother had died after being set on fire while he slept in a bus shelter.
     
    Ron Lawrence read a victim impact statement today at a sentencing hearing for two men who pleaded guilty in the death of his brother Harley, a 62-year-old man who was homeless.
     
    Lawrence says his brother's death was a tragic loss for him and he will be dealing with it for the rest of his life.
     
    Twenty-seven-year-old Daniel Wayne Surette and 26-year-old Kyle David James Fredericks pleaded guilty in February to second-degree murder.
     
    According to an agreed statement of facts, Surette bought $10 worth of gasoline while Fredericks pumped it into a plastic jug on Oct. 23, 2013, in Berwick, a community about 120 kilometres northwest of Halifax.
     
    The statement of facts says Surette poured the gas on Lawrence and either he or Fredericks had set him on fire with a lighter.
     
    After Lawrence's death, local residents said he was using the bus shelter for refuge as temperatures dipped.
     
    In the days that followed, a candlelight vigil was held in his memory where the bus shelter stood.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four Mounties On Vancouver Island Face Assault Charges After 2 Investigations

    Four Mounties On Vancouver Island Face Assault Charges After 2 Investigations
    VICTORIA — Four Mounties on Vancouver Island face assault-related charges in connection with alleged jail-cell incidents at two RCMP detachments.

    Four Mounties On Vancouver Island Face Assault Charges After 2 Investigations

    Body-Worn Cameras Will Do B.C. Police Good, Recommends All-Party Report

    Body-Worn Cameras Will Do B.C. Police Good, Recommends All-Party Report
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia legislative committee has recommended the provincial government "aggressively pursue" whatever steps are necessary to suit up police with body-mounted cameras.

    Body-Worn Cameras Will Do B.C. Police Good, Recommends All-Party Report

    Independent MLA Says Provincial Government Should Be Steering BC Ferries

    Independent MLA Says Provincial Government Should Be Steering BC Ferries
    VICTORIA — Independent Delta South MLA Vicki Huntington is calling on the provincial government to take control of BC Ferries.

    Independent MLA Says Provincial Government Should Be Steering BC Ferries

    Pilot project leads to improvements in education at First Nations schools: Martin

    Pilot project leads to improvements in education at First Nations schools: Martin
    TORONTO — Former prime minister Paul Martin says a pilot project at two First Nations elementary schools in Ontario has led to dramatic improvements in reading and writing.

    Pilot project leads to improvements in education at First Nations schools: Martin

    Hazel McCallion, former Mississauga mayor, takes new job at age 94

    Hazel McCallion, former Mississauga mayor, takes new job at age 94
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — "Hurricane Hazel" is still going strong.

    Hazel McCallion, former Mississauga mayor, takes new job at age 94

    Jury deciding fate of accused in explosion that killed disabled Alberta woman

    Jury deciding fate of accused in explosion that killed disabled Alberta woman
    RED DEER, Alta. — The fate of a central Alberta financial adviser accused of killing his disabled client with a bomb made to look like a Christmas present is now with a jury.

    Jury deciding fate of accused in explosion that killed disabled Alberta woman