Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Father Tells B.C. Judge That Happy, Loving Girl, 8, Taken For No Reason

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2019 06:41 PM

    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — The father of an eight-year-old girl who was smothered by her mother says a happy, empathetic, sensitive and loving child was taken away from the world for no reason.


    Gabe Batstone told a British Columbia Supreme Court judge at Lisa Batstone's sentencing hearing that the worst part has been seeing the impact on her two young half-brothers, who live with "profound grief."


    Lisa Batstone, of Surrey, B.C., faces an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for at least 10 years for smothering her sleeping daughter, Teagan, with a plastic bag in December 2014.


    Crown lawyer Christopher McPherson asked the judge to make the woman ineligible for parole for 16 to 18 years because Batstone abused her position of trust to kill a child and has continued to attempt to deflect blame.


    Gabe Batstone's current wife, Stephanie Batstone, told the judge through tears that her eldest son has lost his ability to be a kid because Lisa Batstone took his sister, his best friend and his childhood.


    The defence has not yet had the opportunity to make sentencing submissions, but it argued at trial that her mental state at the time of her daughter's death was unclear.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec zoo at heart of cruelty allegations ordered closed by workers' safety board

    Animal welfare groups had moved to seize over 100 wild and exotic animals including lions, tigers, wolves, deer and dozens of other species from the rural property east of Montreal.

    Quebec zoo at heart of cruelty allegations ordered closed by workers' safety board

    Missing, murdered women inquiry calls for justice system to review policies

    Canadian society has shown an "appalling apathy" towards addressing the issue, say the inquiry's commissioners, who reach the explosive conclusion "that this amounts to genocide."

    Missing, murdered women inquiry calls for justice system to review policies

    Modest home sales boost in Greater Vancouver in May, but market still sluggish

    Modest home sales boost in Greater Vancouver in May, but market still sluggish
    The board says 2,638 homes changed hands in May — the first time this year that sales jumped above 2,000 properties in a month.

    Modest home sales boost in Greater Vancouver in May, but market still sluggish

    Report forecasts higher costs for local force in Surrey, B.C., than use of RCMP

    Report forecasts higher costs for local force in Surrey, B.C., than use of RCMP
    Doug McCallum said Monday a municipal force would be able to recruit officers who spend their careers in the city, develop relationships with residents, businesses and community groups, and improve public trust and safety.

    Report forecasts higher costs for local force in Surrey, B.C., than use of RCMP

    Officer hurt in crash between RCMP cruiser, transport truck, near Kelowna, B.C.

    Officer hurt in crash between RCMP cruiser, transport truck, near Kelowna, B.C.
    The officer was responding to a call in the Kelowna area at about 6 p.m. Monday when his unmarked, SUV collided with a transport truck travelling in the same direction.

    Officer hurt in crash between RCMP cruiser, transport truck, near Kelowna, B.C.

    Trudeau accepts the finding of genocide, but says focus needs to be on response

    Debate has erupted over the definition of the term after the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls repeatedly used it in its final report released Monday.

    Trudeau accepts the finding of genocide, but says focus needs to be on response