Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Cory Bird Who Stabbed Friend 73 Admits Lying To Police To Cover Bisexuality

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2015 10:47 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A man accused of killing his friend by stabbing him 73 times told an RCMP investigator he originally lied about what happened to cover up his bisexuality.
     
    Cory Bird, 27, is charged with second-degree murder in the death of Albert Michell in August 2008.
     
    A B.C. Supreme Court trial heard Bird fled to Montreal where he was arrested for Michell’s murder, but, two days later, back in B.C. and in custody, admitted to police he lied during his first interview.
     
    Bird had initially told police that Michell first came at him with a knife, demanding sex.
     
    “It’s a lie,” Bird told Cpl. Cam Holloway, a major crime investigator, on a video played before a 12-person jury.
     
    “He didn’t come at me with a knife."
     
    Bird told the investigator that the only reason he made up those stories was so friends and family wouldn't know he was bisexual.
     
    In repeated questioning, Bird told Holloway he could not explain why he stabbed Michell.
     
    He said he split about 15 beers and a bottle of liqueur with Michell that evening before falling asleep, and woke up in a drunken stupor to find Michell giving him oral sex.
     
    Throughout the interview, Bird called Michell a “nice guy” who hadn’t made sexual advances to him in past.
     
     
    “I’ve never had the urge to kill,” Bird said. "It wasn’t an urge — I just did it.”
     
    Bird was distraught at times during hours of police interviews and broke down, particularly when he was confronted by the fact he stabbed Michell more than the seven times to which he admitted.
     
    “You times that by 10 and you’d be closer to the truth,” Holloway told him.
     
    Bird appeared astonished.
     
    "I'm shell-shocked," he said. 
     
    Before the second interview, court heard Holloway travelled with Bird — who was under arrest and in handcuffs — on a passenger flight from Montreal to B.C.
     
    Holloway testified that they spent hours talking, with Bird asking questions and carrying conversation about everything from pop culture to religion.
     
    “Mr. Bird was very inquisitive,” Holloway said.
     
    “He asked a lot of questions and was very personable.” (Kamloops This Week)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Be their Guest : Disney's Beauty and the Beast Review

    Be their Guest : Disney's Beauty and the Beast Review
    This tale as old as time is a treat for the entire family 

    Be their Guest : Disney's Beauty and the Beast Review

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster
    VANCOUVER — Transit Police in Metro Vancouver say they have arrested a 17-year-old boy who was carrying an air pistol resembling a handgun.

    Transit Police Arrest A Teen With Air Pistol Resembling A Handgun In New Westminster

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP
    NANAIMO, B.C. — Six people spent much of a day locked up in a Vancouver Island RCMP detachment over what police now say were false robbery and confinement allegations.

    Woman's Allegations Of Robbery, Confinement, Threats Were False: B.C. RCMP

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government has vowed to make the provincial utilities commission more independent almost three years after it stepped in and refused to allow the body to raise hydro rates for customers.

    Bennett Says B.C. Utilities Commission To Resume Setting BC Hydro Rates

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Conservation authorities are trying to discredit and embarrass his client, says a lawyer representing an alleged cross-border poacher accused of lying about where he shot a record-setting Dall sheep.

    Lawyer Says Authorities Trying To Embarrass Hunter Accused Of Killing Sheep In Yukon

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears
    VANCOUVER — A list of the 18 women and girls whose deaths and disappearances are part of the RCMP's investigation of the Highway of Tears in British Columbia. They were either found or last seen near Highways 16, 97 or 5:

    A List Of The Victims Along Infamous B.C.'s Highway Of Tears