Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gabriel Klein Found Guilty In Abbotsford Secondary School Stabbings That Killed 13-Yr-Old Student Letisha Reimer

06 Mar, 2020 07:35 PM

    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. - A judge has found a man guilty of second-degree murder and aggravated assault in an attack more than three years ago on two students at a British Columbia high school.

     

    Defence lawyer Martin Peters had argued in December that Gabriel Klein did not have the intent to kill a 13-year-old girl on Nov. 1, 2016, when he walked into the rotunda of Abbotsford Secondary School.

     

    He urged Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes of the B.C. Supreme Court to find his client guilty of manslaughter, but she found Klein guilty of second-degree murder today.

     

    Letisha Reimer died after being stabbed 14 times and her friend, who was also stabbed, suffered serious injuries, for which Klein has been charged with aggravated assault.

     

    Peters said in his closing arguments the Crown proved its case in the assault against the girl whose name is under a publication ban, and Klein should be found guilty on that charge.

     

    Surveillance videos seen in court showed Klein stealing alcohol from a liquor store and a hunting knife from a sporting goods store hours before the attack, and Peters said his client committed the thefts because he wanted to get drunk and use the weapon to stab a police officer in hopes of triggering a suicide-by-cop scenario.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Northern B.C. Man Killed In Crash With Diesel Tanker Near Hope, B.C.

    Northern B.C. Man Killed In Crash With Diesel Tanker Near Hope, B.C.
    VANCOUVER - RCMP say a British Columbia man has died in a head-on crash with a tanker truck east of Vancouver.    

    Northern B.C. Man Killed In Crash With Diesel Tanker Near Hope, B.C.

    B.C. Lottery Corp. Executive Denied Standing In Money Laundering Inquiry

    B.C. Lottery Corp. Executive Denied Standing In Money Laundering Inquiry
    VANCOUVER - A senior executive at British Columbia Lottery Corp. has been denied standing in the province's money laundering inquiry although he could still be called as a witness.

    B.C. Lottery Corp. Executive Denied Standing In Money Laundering Inquiry

    Private Ferry Between Vancouver And Victoria Stops Operations, Cites Economics

    Private Ferry Between Vancouver And Victoria Stops Operations, Cites Economics
    VANCOUVER - A private ferry connecting harbours in Vancouver and Victoria has shut down.

    Private Ferry Between Vancouver And Victoria Stops Operations, Cites Economics

    Chair Named To Improve Cancer Outcomes For Indigenous Peoples In B.C.

    Chair Named To Improve Cancer Outcomes For Indigenous Peoples In B.C.
    VANCOUVER - Dr. Nadine Caron says she hears difficult stories every day from some of her Indigenous patients in rural British Columbia facing a diagnosis of cancer.    

    Chair Named To Improve Cancer Outcomes For Indigenous Peoples In B.C.

    Company Says Work Delay Possible As It Seeks Meeting Over B.C. Pipeline Dispute

    Company Says Work Delay Possible As It Seeks Meeting Over B.C. Pipeline Dispute
    A company building a natural gas pipeline though northwestern British Columbia says it could delay work in an area at the centre of a dispute with a First Nation, but it is ready to resume construction.    

    Company Says Work Delay Possible As It Seeks Meeting Over B.C. Pipeline Dispute

    UN Racism Committee Calls For Halt To Site C, Trans Mountain And LNG Pipeline

    A United Nations committee working to end racism is urging Canada to immediately stop the construction of three major resource projects until it obtains approval from affected First Nations.    

    UN Racism Committee Calls For Halt To Site C, Trans Mountain And LNG Pipeline