Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Facebook Selfie Helps Nail Canadian Woman, 20, Who Murdered Her Friend

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Jan, 2018 11:41 AM
    A Canadian woman has been convicted of killing her friend after police discovered the murder weapon used in a picture of the pair on social media.
     
     
    Cheyenne Rose Antoine, 21, pleaded guilty on Monday to killing Brittney Gargol, 18, in Canada two years ago, BBC reported on Wednesday.
     
     
    Gargol was found strangled to death near a landfill in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan with Antoine's belt near her body.
     
     
    Antoine was sentenced to seven years for manslaughter.
     
     
    She was identified as a suspect after she posted a selfie on Facebook of the two of them, showing her wearing the belt hours before Gargol died.
     
     
     
     
    Antoine, who was initially charged with second-degree murder, showed up at another friend's house hysterical the night of the murder and confessed to hitting Gargol and strangling her, CBC reported from court.
     
     
    She said they had got drunk and into a heated argument.
     
     
    As part of her plea, Antoine accepted responsibility for Gargol's death but said she does not remember killing her.
     
     
    "I will never forgive myself. Nothing I say or do will ever bring her back. I am very, very sorry... It shouldn't have ever happened," she said in a statement through her lawyer.
     
     
    Before Antoine was sentenced, Gargol's aunt gave a victim impact statement to the court.
     
     
    "Most days we can't stop thinking about Brittney what happened that night, what she must have felt fighting for her life," Jennifer Gargol said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    What A Federal Ethics Report Reveals About How Justin Trudeau Sees His Job

    What A Federal Ethics Report Reveals About How Justin Trudeau Sees His Job
    Some prime ministers view themselves as a CEO who set ideas and are the face of the government, leaving the heavy lifting to their ministers or senior civil servants. Others consider themselves the CEO types who are more involved in the day-to-day operations.

    What A Federal Ethics Report Reveals About How Justin Trudeau Sees His Job

    Homeless Man Returns Mistakenly Donated Diamond Ring To B.C. Woman

    Homeless Man Returns Mistakenly Donated Diamond Ring To B.C. Woman
    Trinda Gajek was visiting Nanaimo last week when she came across a young man who she said "wasn't looking so good" and offered him some cash.

    Homeless Man Returns Mistakenly Donated Diamond Ring To B.C. Woman

    Man Stabbed In Targeted Attack In Downtown Vancouver On Christmas Eve

    Man Stabbed In Targeted Attack In Downtown Vancouver On Christmas Eve
    The VPD are investigating what appears to be a targeted attack against a man in his 30s this afternoon in downtown Vancouver. No arrests have been made and the victim is not cooperating with police

    Man Stabbed In Targeted Attack In Downtown Vancouver On Christmas Eve

    Homicide Team Probing 'Targeted' Death Of Gavinder Grewal In North Vancouver, B.C.

    Homicide Team Probing 'Targeted' Death Of Gavinder Grewal In North Vancouver, B.C.
    The Integrated Homicide Investigations Team says in a release that Grewal's death is believed to be targeted and linked to other gang violence in the Lower Mainland.

    Homicide Team Probing 'Targeted' Death Of Gavinder Grewal In North Vancouver, B.C.

    Some Quebec Flood Victims Preparing To Spend Christmas In Hotel Rooms

    Some Quebec Flood Victims Preparing To Spend Christmas In Hotel Rooms
    The Montreal-area resident, his wife and their four children are one of several families who are still living in hotel rooms ever since flood waters swept through their home last spring.

    Some Quebec Flood Victims Preparing To Spend Christmas In Hotel Rooms

    B.C. Health Official Wants To Put Safe And Common Opioid In Vending Machines

    B.C. Health Official Wants To Put Safe And Common Opioid In Vending Machines
    Making a safe opioid available in vending machines may be the next harm reduction tool to fight the deadly overdose epidemic, says the executive medical director of the B.C. Centre for Disease Control.

    B.C. Health Official Wants To Put Safe And Common Opioid In Vending Machines