Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette Murder: Preliminary Hearing For Suspect In Deaths Of Alberta Father, Child

The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2016 11:52 AM
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — Family members of a slain two-year-old girl and her father were in court for the first time Friday to witness the appearance of the man accused in the crimes.
     
    Derek Saretzky appeared briefly via closed-circuit television from the Calgary Remand Centre. He is charged with first-degree murder in the September deaths of Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette and Terry Blanchette.
     
    Saretzky, 23, is also charged with committing an indignity to the little girl's body.
     
    Hailey's maternal grandmother, Terry-Lynn Dunbar, was one of the relatives at the Lethbridge courthouse, but declined comment.
     
    A victims services member, who accompanied the family, said she was helping them navigate the court system.
     
    Dunbar posted a statement in September after the bodies were found.
     
    "As a mother and (formerly) grandmother my pain is unimaginable at the loss of my only grandchild in such a horrific manner," she wrote.
     
    "The Dunbar and Blanchette families will be forever broken."
     
     
    After a lengthy psychological assessment, Saretzky has been found fit to stand trial. A preliminary hearing, which is to determine if there is enough evidence for a trial, is scheduled for 10 days starting June 20.
     
    He was arrested after Blanchette’s body was found in his Blairmore, home in the Crowsnest Pass of southwestern Alberta on Sept. 14. Authorities couldn’t find Hailey and issued an Amber Alert that stretched across Western Canada and into the United States.
     
    Her body was found a day later in a rural area near Blairmore.
     
    News of the girl’s death broke during a candlelight vigil where residents of the tight-knit town had gathered to pray for her safe return.
     
    Police have said Saretzky and Blanchette were acquaintances, but have not elaborated on how the two men knew each other.
     
    The little girl’s mother, Cheyenne Dunbar, has described Saretzky as an old friend to whom she hadn’t spoken in years.
     
    Saretzky’s family is well known in the blue-collar mountain town as owners of a dry-cleaning business.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police North Of Montreal Sound Alarm After Third Teenage Girl Reported Missing

    Police North Of Montreal Sound Alarm After Third Teenage Girl Reported Missing
    Laval police say Mathilde Geoffroy Aube, 16, has not been seen since Monday.

    Police North Of Montreal Sound Alarm After Third Teenage Girl Reported Missing

    Montreal-Area Hockey Player Andrew Zaccardo Awarded $8 Million After Being Paralyzed

    Montreal-Area Hockey Player Andrew Zaccardo Awarded $8 Million After Being Paralyzed
    One of Andrew Zaccardo's lawyers said the amount handed down in a judge's ruling this week might be a record in such a case in any sport.

    Montreal-Area Hockey Player Andrew Zaccardo Awarded $8 Million After Being Paralyzed

    Ontario Offers $100 Million For Upgrades To Natural Gas Furnaces, Water Heaters

    Ontario Offers $100 Million For Upgrades To Natural Gas Furnaces, Water Heaters
    Environment and Climate Change Minister Glen Murray says 37,000 customers of Enbridge Gas and Union Gas will be able to have home energy audits to identify energy-saving options.

    Ontario Offers $100 Million For Upgrades To Natural Gas Furnaces, Water Heaters

    Halifax Restaurant Owner Blames 'New Generation' Of Staff For Eatery Closure, Sparks Social Uproar

    Halifax Restaurant Owner Blames 'New Generation' Of Staff For Eatery Closure, Sparks Social Uproar
    A Halifax-area restaurant owner has sparked a social media uproar by complaining that a "frustrating new generation" of employees with a poor work ethic has helped kill her business.

    Halifax Restaurant Owner Blames 'New Generation' Of Staff For Eatery Closure, Sparks Social Uproar

    Indigenous People Allege Discrimination, Racism In Winnipeg Taxi Industry

    Indigenous People Allege Discrimination, Racism In Winnipeg Taxi Industry
    Jackie Traverse says she and other indigenous women are treated like "garbage" — subject to sexual harassment and even assault

    Indigenous People Allege Discrimination, Racism In Winnipeg Taxi Industry

    B.C. Union Joins First Nations Vowing To Use Law To Fight Pipelines

    VANCOUVER — A union representing 65,000 workers in British Columbia has signed a declaration vowing to oppose pipelines from crossing the territories of more than 130 First Nations.

    B.C. Union Joins First Nations Vowing To Use Law To Fight Pipelines