Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Calgary Stepmom Convicted In Beating Death Of Girl, 6, Appeals To Supreme Court

The Canadian Press, 26 Jan, 2017 11:34 AM
    CALGARY — A Calgary woman serving a life sentence for murdering her six-year-old stepdaughter, Meika Jordan, is appealing to the Supreme Court of Canada.
     
    Marie Magoon is asking the court to overturn her first-degree murder conviction for torturing and beating the child to death in 2011.
     
    It’s unclear if the high court will hear the application.
     
    Magoon was originally convicted of second-degree murder alongside Meika’s biological father, Spencer Jordan, in September 2015.
     
    But Alberta's top court upgraded the convictions for both of them to first-degree.
     
    They were ordered to serve life with no parole for at least 25 years.
     
    The trial heard that Meika Jordan was severely abused over the course of a weekend in November 2011.
     
    Jordan punched his daughter in the stomach and pushed her so hard her head smacked a tile floor. When she refused his order of running the stairs, he dragged her up and down the steps by her ankles and hair.
     
    Magoon also shoved and kicked Meika on the stairs and the girl hit her head again and again. Magoon held the girl by her arms and shook her head on the kitchen floor, asking her why should wouldn't listen to her father.
     
    It appears the first of the assaults was a burn. Magoon held Meika's hand over the flame of a lighter while the girl screamed and urinated.
     
    The couple eventually called an ambulance and paramedics found the girl unconscious and not breathing. Jordan and Magoon told them Meika fell down some stairs.
     
    She died the next day in hospital of head trauma.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ban Ki-Moon Praises Canada's Openness To Refugees During Visit To Calgary

    Ban Ki-Moon Praises Canada's Openness To Refugees During Visit To Calgary
    In a speech at the University of Calgary, Ban said he was grateful for the "generous and compassionate" commitment of the Canadian government to resettle tens of thousands of Syrian refugees.

    Ban Ki-Moon Praises Canada's Openness To Refugees During Visit To Calgary

    Home Prices Up Two Per Cent In July, With Victoria And Toronto Leading

    Home Prices Up Two Per Cent In July, With Victoria And Toronto Leading
    The index, which measures the price changes on repeat single-family home sales, showed the second-highest July jump in its 17-year history.

    Home Prices Up Two Per Cent In July, With Victoria And Toronto Leading

    Dad Says Suspected Terrorist Became Troubled At Seven When His Mother Died

    Dad Says Suspected Terrorist Became Troubled At Seven When His Mother Died
    COLD LAKE, Alta. — The father of a terrorist sympathizer who died in a confrontation with RCMP Wednesday says Aaron Driver was a troubled child, but appeared to have turned his life around after converting to Islam.

    Dad Says Suspected Terrorist Became Troubled At Seven When His Mother Died

    RCMP Describe 'Race Against Time' In Effort To Thwart Would-Be Bomber Driver

    RCMP Describe 'Race Against Time' In Effort To Thwart Would-Be Bomber Driver
    Within three hours, they believed they had found their man: Aaron Driver, 24, a known terrorist sympathizer who was living in the southwestern Ontario town of Strathroy, under court-imposed conditions.

    RCMP Describe 'Race Against Time' In Effort To Thwart Would-Be Bomber Driver

    Wandering Moose Inspires 400-Mile Cross-border Trail

    Wandering Moose Inspires 400-Mile Cross-border Trail
    NEWCOMB, N.Y. — The 400-mile trek of a radio-collared moose named Alice is the inspiration for a proposed hiking trail from Ontario's forested Algonquin Park to the heart of New York's Adirondack Mountains.

    Wandering Moose Inspires 400-Mile Cross-border Trail

    Cleaning Victoria Homeless Camp Could Cost $350,000: Housing Minister

    Cleaning Victoria Homeless Camp Could Cost $350,000: Housing Minister
     Fences are up and debris is being hauled away from the now-vacant homeless camp outside Victoria's courthouse, but British Columbia's housing minister says the cleanup will be long and costly.

    Cleaning Victoria Homeless Camp Could Cost $350,000: Housing Minister