Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Crown Wants New Murder Trial For Calgary Woman Who Tossed Newborns Into Garbage

The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2016 12:42 PM
    OTTAWA — Alberta Crown prosecutors argue the charge of infanticide is "outdated and rife with problems" and have asked Canada's top court to order a new trial for a woman convicted of the crime after tossing three of her newborns into the garbage.
     
    Meredith Borowiec of Calgary was originally charged with two counts of second-degree murder for the deaths of two of her children in 2008 and 2009.
     
    A third infant born in 2010 survived when the baby's father, not knowing it was his child, helped pull the newborn out of a neighbourhood trash bin after a passerby heard cries.
     
    The trial judge ruled Borowiec was suffering from a mental disturbance at the time and found her guilty of the lesser crime of infanticide, along with aggravated assault. 
     
    Borowiec was sentenced to an additional 18 months in jail two years ago on top of the 18 months she had already spent in custody. She was also given three years of probation.
     
    Alberta's Court of Appeal upheld the infanticide verdicts, but it was a split decision, meaning the matter automatically moved to the Supreme Court.
     
    In a submission to the seven member panel, prosecutor Julie Morgan said there is no clear guidance as to what constitutes a "disturbed mind."
     
    "The defence of infanticide is vague, outdated and rife with problems," she writes in her submission. "The infanticide provision requires a purposive and pro-social interpretation that would prevent this defence from being applied across the board to all mothers who kill their newborn children while only mildly disturbed." 
     
    Borowiec's lawyer, Andrea Serink, countered that infanticide is part of the human condition.
     
    "The dissenting justice and the appellants raise a floodgates argument that mothers suffering the 'baby blues' will kill their offspring days or weeks or months after birth, then escape murder convictions if this appeal is dismissed," she said in her submission.
     
     
    "Times have changed, women's circumstances have improved, neonaticides have substantially diminished, but prototypical offenders, of which the respondent is the most recent, are and probably always will be amongst us."
     
    The top court also heard submissions from the Criminal Lawyers' Association of Ontario and the Women's Legal Education & Action Fund who argued against the appeal.
     
    The decision was reserved Wednesday.
     
    In interviews with police, Borowiec admitted she heard the babies cry before she put them in trash bags and dropped them into garbage bins, but denied doing anything to hurt them before she disposed of them.
     
    Court heard she didn't even look to see whether it was a boy or a girl before she wrapped her first-born infant in a towel and put it in a garbage bag.
     
    Borowiec admitted to a similar scenario in 2009 when she again gave birth into a toilet in her apartment, wrapped the child in a towel and dropped it into the bathroom garbage before walking out to a Dumpster and disposing of the child.
     
    Borowiec gave birth to a fourth baby while in police custody in July 2012. The child was taken from her.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Seniors Urged To Learn If They Qualify For Medical Services Plan Subsidy

    B.C. Seniors Urged To Learn If They Qualify For Medical Services Plan Subsidy
    Isobel Mackenzie says seniors could be eligible for full or partial payments but most are unaware of the available help.

    B.C. Seniors Urged To Learn If They Qualify For Medical Services Plan Subsidy

    Slumping Loonie Could Add $3.5 Billion To Cost Of Windsor-Detroit Bridge, Trudeau Told

    Slumping Loonie Could Add $3.5 Billion To Cost Of Windsor-Detroit Bridge, Trudeau Told
    OTTAWA — The federal Liberal government will need to find $3.5 billion more to pay for a new bridge at the bustling border crossing between Canada and the United States.

    Slumping Loonie Could Add $3.5 Billion To Cost Of Windsor-Detroit Bridge, Trudeau Told

    Alberta Judge Calls For Better Gun Licence Screening In Wake Of Fatal RCMP Shooting

    Alberta Judge Calls For Better Gun Licence Screening In Wake Of Fatal RCMP Shooting
    Corey Lewis, who was 39, was shot outside his Okotoks home on July 2010 after a standoff with a Mountie tactical team.

    Alberta Judge Calls For Better Gun Licence Screening In Wake Of Fatal RCMP Shooting

    B.C. Hydro Orders Protesters Off Land Slated For Logging Near Site C Dam

    B.C. Hydro Orders Protesters Off Land Slated For Logging Near Site C Dam
      The notice was issued Dec. 31, giving demonstrators 24 hours to leave the Rocky Mountain Fort area on the south bank of the river, just a few kilometres south of Fort St. John.

    B.C. Hydro Orders Protesters Off Land Slated For Logging Near Site C Dam

    More Visitors, More Costs: Fees Going Up To Visit Saskatchewan Provincial Parks

    More Visitors, More Costs: Fees Going Up To Visit Saskatchewan Provincial Parks
    The government says there were a record 3.9 million visits to the parks last year and costs to maintain services are rising.

    More Visitors, More Costs: Fees Going Up To Visit Saskatchewan Provincial Parks

    Turning Off E-mail App On Phone Can Make You Happier

    Turning Off E-mail App On Phone Can Make You Happier
    E-mail can simultaneously be a great communication tool and a source of frustration and stress, the findings showed.

    Turning Off E-mail App On Phone Can Make You Happier