Close X
Saturday, September 21, 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

    Canada Hosts Lima Group, Appeals For World's Help On Venezuela Crisis

    Canada Hosts Lima Group, Appeals For World's Help On Venezuela Crisis
    Canada and its Western Hemisphere allies are calling on the rest of the democratic world to help bring stability to Venezuela, hobbled by a refugee crisis and economic collapse under a dictator they deem illegitimate.    

    Canada Hosts Lima Group, Appeals For World's Help On Venezuela Crisis

    Protests Put Pressure On Trudeau

    The federal Crown-Indigenous relations minister is offering to meet today with Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs in northwestern British Columbia.

    Protests Put Pressure On Trudeau

    Babies Frequently Exposed To Cleaning Products At Higher Risk Of Asthma: Study

    Babies Frequently Exposed To Cleaning Products At Higher Risk Of Asthma: Study
    New research suggests frequent exposure to common household cleaning products can increase a child's risk of developing asthma.

    Babies Frequently Exposed To Cleaning Products At Higher Risk Of Asthma: Study

    Vancouver Fire Says Smoking Caused The City's First Fatal Fire Of 2020

    Vancouver Fire Says Smoking Caused The City's First Fatal Fire Of 2020
    VANCOUVER - A man with mobility challenges has died after being trapped in his burning home in Vancouver.

    Vancouver Fire Says Smoking Caused The City's First Fatal Fire Of 2020

    ICBC Is Forecasting A Year-end Net Loss Of $91 Million In Third Quarter Results

    ICBC Is Forecasting A Year-end Net Loss Of $91 Million In Third Quarter Results
    Total claims costs for the first three quarters of our fiscal year (April 1, 2019 – December 31, 2019) totalled $4.28 billion, $574 million less than the same period last year.

    ICBC Is Forecasting A Year-end Net Loss Of $91 Million In Third Quarter Results

    First Case Of COVID-19 In B.C. Has Fully Recovered, Health Officials Say

    Adrian Dix, Minister of Health, and Dr. Bonnie Henry, B.C.'s provincial health officer, have issued the following joint statement regarding updates on the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in British Columbia:    

    First Case Of COVID-19 In B.C. Has Fully Recovered, Health Officials Say