Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Calgary Woman Convicted With Husband In Son's Murder Files Appeal

Darpan News Desk, 24 Mar, 2017 01:07 PM
    CALGARY — A woman found guilty of murdering her own son has filed an appeal that claims the judge showed bias by crying during the trial.
     
    Emil and Rodica Radita of Calgary were convicted of first-degree murder last month in the death of their 15-year-old son Alexandru.
     
    Justice Karen Horner of Court of Queen's Bench heard the trial without a jury and was told the boy was so neglected, he weighed just 37 pounds when he died in 2013 of complications from untreated diabetes and starvation.
     
    Horner sentenced the parents to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.
     
    Rodica Radita's appeal notice of her conviction and the sentence she received is in her own handwriting on a form that shows her address as the federal women's prison in Edmonton.
     
    "I am not guilty of murdering my son and the judge finding that I am shows that she did not look at all of the evidence," Radita wrote.
     
    "The judge's crying during my case — closing argument and while reading her decision — demonstrates that she was bias.
     
     
    "Saying that my arguments were 'non-sensical' when they were based on the actual evidence further shows her bias and inability to decide my case on the facts rather than on emotion."
     
    When Horner handed down her verdict, she said the couple was in gross denial of Alexandru's disease.
     
    "Children in Canada rarely die from diabetes, but proper treatment requires due diligence,'' the judge said.
     
    Horner said it appeared that Alexandru had not received proper care for years, even though the Raditas were fully trained on how to look after him.
     
    Alberta's chief medical examiner testified that an autopsy showed the teen was severely underweight and covered in ulcers.
     
    Dr. Jeffery Gofton said Alexandru appeared skeletal with thin hair and sunken eyes. He said the boy was wearing a diaper and had very little body fat. Gofton told court that most of the teen's teeth had rotted down to the root.
     
    Defence lawyer Andrea Serink argued that the Raditas were guilty of manslaughter, not murder.
     
    Witnesses testified that the Raditas refused to accept that their son had diabetes and failed to treat his disease until he was hospitalized near death in British Columbia in 2003.
     
    B.C. social workers apprehended Alexandru after his hospital admission and placed him in foster care — where he thrived — for nearly a year before he was returned to his family.
     
    Emil Radita's lawyer said that as of Thursday his client had not filed an appeal.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Objects After Surname 'Grabher' Refused As Licence Plate In Nova Scotia

    Man Objects After Surname 'Grabher' Refused As Licence Plate In Nova Scotia
    HALIFAX — The Nova Scotia government has withdrawn a man's eponymous personalized licence plate, saying Lorne Grabher's surname is offensive to women.

    Man Objects After Surname 'Grabher' Refused As Licence Plate In Nova Scotia

    Hubbub In House Of Commons Over How The Place Works, Inflames Partisan Tensions

    Hubbub In House Of Commons Over How The Place Works, Inflames Partisan Tensions
    OTTAWA — The customary grilling of government that follows the tabling of a federal budget was all but shoved aside Thursday as opposition MPs pressed the Liberals not on their fiscal balance, but their work-life one.

    Hubbub In House Of Commons Over How The Place Works, Inflames Partisan Tensions

    Commons Votes By 2-1 Margin To Pass Motion Condemning Islamophobia

    OTTAWA — The House of Commons has passed a Liberal backbencher's motion calling on federal politicians to condemn Islamophobia.

    Commons Votes By 2-1 Margin To Pass Motion Condemning Islamophobia

    Urinating On Police Cruiser Nets Charges For Man In Ridgetown, Ont.

    Urinating On Police Cruiser Nets Charges For Man In Ridgetown, Ont.
    Chatham-Kent police say an officer was sitting in his fully marked cruiser in Ridgetown, Ont., early Friday morning when a man came out of a nearby bar.

    Urinating On Police Cruiser Nets Charges For Man In Ridgetown, Ont.

    Indians May Soon Be Issued Chip-Enabled E-Passports

    Indians May Soon Be Issued Chip-Enabled E-Passports
    Chip enabled e-passports with high security features may soon be rolled out as government has started preparation for introducing it.

    Indians May Soon Be Issued Chip-Enabled E-Passports

    Former Quebec Ski Coach Facing Sex Assault Charges Will Learn His Fate In June

    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — A judge will hand down his verdict in June in the case of a former national ski coach charged with dozens of sex-related offences against girls and young women.

    Former Quebec Ski Coach Facing Sex Assault Charges Will Learn His Fate In June

    PrevNext