Close X
Sunday, February 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Defence Urges Jury To Find Stepmom Accused Of Killing Teen Not Guilty

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jun, 2016 11:50 AM
    TORONTO — A Toronto jury hearing the case of a woman accused of killing her stepdaughter is being told she was unaware the teen's life was at risk and that her husband in fact drowned the malnourished and abused girl.
     
    The suggestion is being made in defence closing arguments at the trial of Elaine Biddersingh, who has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of 17-year-old Melonie.
     
    The girl's body was found in a burning suitcase in an industrial parking lot north of Toronto in 1994 but went unidentified for years until 2011, when Biddersingh told an Ontario pastor the girl had "died like a dog."
     
    Melonie's father, Everton Biddersingh, was found guilty in January of first-degree murder in his daughter's death, but jurors at Elaine Biddersingh's trial were instructed to disregard that conviction as "completely irrelevant'' to their case.
     
    Biddersingh's defence lawyer says it was Melonie's father who was a "master manipulator" who "abused everyone in his path," including his wife.
     
    She says he drowned his daughter alone, without his wife's knowledge.
     
    Expert evidence at the trial has indicated Melonie drowned or nearly drowned, inhaling water shortly before her death.
     
    Melonie came to Canada from Jamaica in 1991 with two brothers to live with her father and her stepmother in Toronto.
     
    The trial has heard that Melonie's younger brother died in an accident in 1992, and Melonie and her older brother Cleon's treatment worsened significantly over time.
     
    Court has heard that Melonie was physically and emotionally abused.
     
    The Crown has argued that Biddersingh was the mastermind behind the abuse while her husband was the enforcer.
     
    Medical evidence called in the trial indicated Melonie was severely malnourished and had 21 healing fractures when she died. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Inside The Vote: How The Liberals Convinced A Hesitant Caucus To Support C-14

    Inside The Vote: How The Liberals Convinced A Hesitant Caucus To Support C-14
    OTTAWA — Doug Eyolfson did not love the physician-assisted dying bill at first, but he ended up supporting it.

    Inside The Vote: How The Liberals Convinced A Hesitant Caucus To Support C-14

    Christian University Takes Fight Over Law School To Top Courts In Ontario, B.C.

    Christian University Takes Fight Over Law School To Top Courts In Ontario, B.C.
    TORONTO — A private Christian university that forbids sexual intimacy outside heterosexual marriage will be in Ontario's top court this week, seeking a green light for its proposed law school after the province's law society denied it accreditation.

    Christian University Takes Fight Over Law School To Top Courts In Ontario, B.C.

    Prominent Developer Amarjit Singh Sandhu, 56, Dead After 'Targeted' Shooting In Richmond

    Prominent Developer Amarjit Singh Sandhu, 56, Dead After 'Targeted' Shooting In Richmond
    Sandhu was rushed to hospital where he later died. At the scene, several bullet holes could be seen in the driver's side door of a black pickup truck.

    Prominent Developer Amarjit Singh Sandhu, 56, Dead After 'Targeted' Shooting In Richmond

    Boy, 10, In Hospital After Being Shot In Toronto

    Toronto police say a 10-year-old boy is in serious condition after being shot in the city.

    Boy, 10, In Hospital After Being Shot In Toronto

    Crews Call Off Search For Burnaby, B.C., Swimmer Missing In Fraser River

    Crews Call Off Search For Burnaby, B.C., Swimmer Missing In Fraser River
    SURREY, B.C. — Police say the search has been called off for a missing swimmer in the Fraser River.

    Crews Call Off Search For Burnaby, B.C., Swimmer Missing In Fraser River

    B.C. Support Worker Michael Hume's Appeal Of Body-Shaving Sexual Assault Conviction Dismissed

    The B.C. Court of Appeal has dismissed the case of a man convicted of sexual assault for shaving the body hair of a young man who passed out at his home

    B.C. Support Worker Michael Hume's Appeal Of Body-Shaving Sexual Assault Conviction Dismissed