Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Eaton Centre shooting trial hears from girlfriend of accused

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2014 11:04 AM

    TORONTO — The girlfriend of a man who killed two people when he opened fire at Toronto's Eaton Centre says he told her he got himself into "some trouble" and was "going away for a really long time."

    LaChelle John told Christopher Husbands's trial that her boyfriend made those comments to her just before he turned himself in to police two days after the shooting at the downtown mall in June 2012.

    Husbands, 25, has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first degree murder and has denied that he went to the mall with the intention of killing anyone.

    The trial has heard that his lawyer plans to argue that Husbands was indeed responsible for the deaths and injuries that resulted from the shooting but that it was a "chance encounter'' with a group of five men that prompted him to open fire.

    John told the court Husbands seemed fine in the hours leading up the shooting.

    She says she was ordering sushi at the mall's crowded food court as Husbands was standing off to the side, holding bags containing purchases they had just made, when she heard him yell the word "what."

    She says she turned around and saw that Husbands appeared to be talking to a group of people, so she turned back to finish her transaction when she heard "a bunch of commotion" behind her.

    John says she turned around again, saw people running everywhere and noticed that Husbands was nowhere to be seen so she turned back to the sushi counter, retrieved the debit card she had been using to pay for her purchase, picked up the bags Husbands had dropped and left the mall.

    John says she and Husbands didn't discuss the events at the mall when she saw him very briefly at her home later that day.

    She says she got a call from an unknown number the following day which turned out to be Husbands.

    "He said ' I got myself into some trouble, I'm going to go get myself a lawyer and I suggest you do the same,'" she told court.

    In the early hours of the following day, John said she got another call from Husbands.

    "He basically said that he's with his lawyer and he's going to turn himself in," she recounted, adding that she went to meet Husbands, who was in a car with his lawyer behind a downtown police station.

    "He said 'I got myself into some trouble and I'm going away for a really long time.'"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Government Hasn't Decided Whether To Proceed With Ban On Menthol Tobacco

    Alberta Government Hasn't Decided Whether To Proceed With Ban On Menthol Tobacco
    EDMONTON - Health advocates fear part of Alberta's flavoured tobacco legislation that would ban menthol may go up in smoke. Cathy Gladwin asked Health Minister Stephen Mandel and Premier Jim Prentice about the law last week when they knocked on her door while they were campaigning in Edmonton, where Mandel hopes to win a seat in a byelection.

    Alberta Government Hasn't Decided Whether To Proceed With Ban On Menthol Tobacco

    Canadian Pacific Says Exploratory Merger Talks With Csx Ended Without A Deal

    Canadian Pacific Says Exploratory Merger Talks With Csx Ended Without A Deal
    CALGARY - Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. said Monday that talks with U.S. peer CSX Corp. have ended without a deal, as regulatory hurdles put a damper on the Calgary-based company's hope for an expanded North American rail network.

    Canadian Pacific Says Exploratory Merger Talks With Csx Ended Without A Deal

    Revealing What Makes A Leader Tick As Important As Policy Detail: Justin Trudeau

    Revealing What Makes A Leader Tick As Important As Policy Detail: Justin Trudeau
    OTTAWA - Justin Trudeau says revealing what makes political leaders tick is just as important as disclosing the minutiae of the policies they'd implement.

    Revealing What Makes A Leader Tick As Important As Policy Detail: Justin Trudeau

    Luka Magnotta First-degree Murder Trial Hears From Harper's Deputy Chief Of Staff

    Luka Magnotta First-degree Murder Trial Hears From Harper's Deputy Chief Of Staff
    CAUTION: GRAPHIC CONTENT MAY DISTURB SOME READERS   MONTREAL — Prime Minister Stephen Harper's deputy chief of staff testified at Luka Rocco Magnotta's first-degree murder trial on Monday about the day her office received a parcel containing the foot of victim Jun Lin.

    Luka Magnotta First-degree Murder Trial Hears From Harper's Deputy Chief Of Staff

    A Glimpse Behind The Public-health Scenes Should Ebola Virus Arrive In Canada

    A Glimpse Behind The Public-health Scenes Should Ebola Virus Arrive In Canada
    OTTAWA - A man who recently travelled to Sierra Leone walked into a southern Ontario hospital last week, feeling unwell. Four minutes later, he was in quarantine and being tested for the Ebola virus. Those tests on the patient in Belleville proved negative.

    A Glimpse Behind The Public-health Scenes Should Ebola Virus Arrive In Canada

    Tug Boat Arrives To Help Disabled Russian Cargo Ship Off B.C. Coast

    Tug Boat Arrives To Help Disabled Russian Cargo Ship Off B.C. Coast
    OLD MASSETT, B.C. - A large tug boat arrived Saturday night to hook onto a Russian cargo ship adrift off the British Columbia coast, calming fears that the ship might drift ashore and cause an environmental disaster.

    Tug Boat Arrives To Help Disabled Russian Cargo Ship Off B.C. Coast