Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Crown says convicted killer has 'selective memory'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Nov, 2020 11:43 PM
  • Crown says convicted killer has 'selective memory'

The guilty plea of man who claims he wrongly spent 37 years in prison should not be set aside because of his "evolving explanations" and "selective memory" of events surrounding the 1983 murder of a toddler, a Crown lawyer says.

Janet Dickie told the British Columbia Appeal Court on Wednesday that Phillip Tallio has exaggerated some aspects of his testimony while giving different details about his whereabouts around the crime scene in Bella Coola on April 23, 1983.

"Nothing supplants the presumption that he pled guilty because he was guilty," Dickie said.

Tallio admitted as such to his own lawyer when he signed a plea deal to second-degree murder and never explicitly denied committing the crime to a psychologist and a psychiatrist who were experts at his trial, Dickie said.

Tallio also told the two experts that he was in a blackout and didn't remember going to the house where court has heard he found 22-month-old Delavina Mack's lifeless body, she said.

Thomas Arbogast, one of Tallio's lawyers, has told the court his client was 17 at the time of the offence but experts determined he was cognitively much younger and likely to have fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.

Tallio therefore did not understand he was signing a document that had him admitting to killing the little girl, Arbogast said.

Tallio received a life sentence without chance of parole for 10 years as part of the plea agreement. He was never released because he refused to admit his guilt to the parole board.

Dickie said there were inconsistencies in Tallio's testimony, pointing to "bald assertions" he made about not paying attention to social workers and lawyers but then letting them take care of everything while not trusting them.

‘"The court is therefore being asked to quash the guilty plea of we say a guilty man on the claim that the Crown had apparently no case whatever, which again we say this is not borne out...."

Part of Tallio's testimony was extremely detailed, including the brand and colour of the socks he was wearing on the morning of Mack's murder, Dickie said. He also said he didn't change or remove any of his clothes before a police interview, she said.

However, she said, he was not wearing any socks when an officer spoke to him about five hours after the girl was found dead. A pair of shorts seized from him had blood on them, Dickie added, though the source of it is unknown.

Tallio's pauses to her questions in court suggested he was trying to "figure out favourable answers," Dickie said.

But Justice S. David Frankel countered that someone slow to think of a response about what happened decades earlier is not necessarily hiding the truth.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now
In a new ruling, Federal Court of Appeal Justice David Stratas has sided with the Trudeau government in extending the life of the Safe Third Country Agreement.

Canada-U. S. refugee pact remains in place for now

Feds split housing funds between big cities

Feds split housing funds between big cities
Canada's biggest city, Toronto, will get the lion's share of that funding pie with about $203 million.

Feds split housing funds between big cities

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'
Acknowledging frustrations around partial lockdowns and scrapped Halloween plans in some parts of the country, Trudeau said Tuesday that Canadians need to gird themselves for a "tough winter ahead."

Trudeau says pandemic 'really sucks'

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons
Federal correctional investigator Ivan Zinger says there are three known cases of doctor-assisted death in federal prisons and each raises questions around consent, choice and dignity.

Watchdog urges pause on assisted death in prisons

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C
Nanaimo RCMP say an officer was called to a doughnut shop on Sunday when staff reported someone had just spray-painted the shop floor.

Artistic impulse ends badly in Nanaimo, B.C

B.C. brings in more COVID restrictions

B.C. brings in more COVID restrictions
Dr. Bonnie Henry says gatherings are now limited to those in an immediate household, plus their safe six -- although in some homes even six guests may be too many.

B.C. brings in more COVID restrictions