Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hamilton man to face 4th trial in the 1981 murder of a young woman

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Dec, 2014 12:51 PM

    TORONTO — An Ontario man will be tried for a fourth time in September 2016 in the murder of a nursing assistant who was killed 33 years ago in the Hamilton area.

    Diane Werendowicz died in 1981. She was dragged into a ravine, allegedly sexually assaulted, strangled and dumped in a creek.

    Robert Badgerow was arrested in her death in 1998 and was convicted of first-degree murder several years later, but the verdict was overturned on appeal.

    A new trial was ordered but ended in a mistrial in 2010 when a jury was unable to reach a verdict. Badgerow's third trial also resulted in a hung jury.

    He then applied for, and was granted, a stay of proceedings when the Crown indicated it intended to try him for a fourth time. That stay was set aside by Ontario's Court of Appeal in April, and a new trial was ordered.

    Badgerow then tried to take his case to the country's highest court, but the Supreme Court of Canada denied his leave to appeal.

    Consequently, a date for his trial was set last week in a scenario his lawyer admits is atypical.

    "It's unusual, but the court has ruled that he's to have a fourth trial," said Russell Silverstein.

    In ordering that a fourth trial should proceed, the Ontario Court of Appeal noted that "highly probative and admissible evidence" was excluded at previous trials, so the Crown hasn't had a full opportunity to put its case before a jury.

    "Notwithstanding the challenges associated with conducting a trial after the passage of almost 35 years, there is a strong public interest in a trial on all the legally admissible evidence and this swings the balance against a stay,'' the Appeal Court wrote.

    The evidence that was previously excluded from the earlier trials is regarding a 911 call from a pay phone, possibly placed by the killer and traced to a location near Badgerow's workplace.

    Court documents have noted that 23-year-old Werendowicz had worked as a nursing assistant at the McMaster University Medical Centre. In June 1981, she and another woman went to a bar in Stoney Creek, in the Hamilton area, after work and had a few beers. She left the bar alone around midnight to walk to her home, which was about 15 minutes away.

    On her way home, court documents have said Werendowicz was dragged into a ravine, sexually assaulted, strangled, dumped in a creek and drowned. When her body was found later that day a tire covered her head and shoulders. When it was lifted, it was discovered she had been strangled, with the strap of her purse wound around her neck.

    Badgerow, who had been arrested in 1981 in connection with the "brutal assault'' of a different young woman in the same area, was identified as a suspect in Werendowicz's killing in the late 1990s.

    Police surreptitiously obtained a sample of Badgerow's DNA and it matched the profile from semen found in Werendowicz's body, court documents have said.

    At his trials, Badgerow maintained he had consensual sex with Werendowicz in the back of his truck outside the bar the night she died and that someone else must have attacked her on her way home.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary man pleads guilty to animal cruelty; taped shut mouths of dog and cat

    Calgary man pleads guilty to animal cruelty; taped shut mouths of dog and cat
    CALGARY — A Calgary man has pleaded guilty to two charges related to animal cruelty involving a dog and cat that had their mouths taped shut.

    Calgary man pleads guilty to animal cruelty; taped shut mouths of dog and cat

    First Nations angry: NAFTA environmental body won't probe Canadian salmon farms

    First Nations angry: NAFTA environmental body won't probe Canadian salmon farms
    MONTREAL — Conservationists and First Nations are angry that NAFTA's environmental watchdog has rejected a recommendation to investigate Canada's handling of salmon farms along the British Columbia coast.

    First Nations angry: NAFTA environmental body won't probe Canadian salmon farms

    Families Of Six Murdered In Surrey Highrise Speak Of Impact Of Deaths

    Families Of Six Murdered In Surrey Highrise Speak Of Impact Of Deaths
    VANCOUVER — The mother of a young man who was murdered sobbed as she described being tortured by guilt for asking her son to stay home and meet a fireplace repairman the day both men were shot dead.

    Families Of Six Murdered In Surrey Highrise Speak Of Impact Of Deaths

    Vancouver Airport Volunteer Helps Travellers Get To Their Destination

    Vancouver Airport Volunteer Helps Travellers Get To Their Destination
    VANCOUVER — As a longtime "Green Coat" volunteer at Vancouver International Airport, Doug Franklin has helped countless travellers find their way around the terminal.

    Vancouver Airport Volunteer Helps Travellers Get To Their Destination

    Dallas Stars' Owner Fined $140,000 For Damaging Fish Habitat During Renovations In Kamloops

    Dallas Stars' Owner Fined $140,000 For Damaging Fish Habitat During Renovations In Kamloops
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The owner of two hockey teams including the Dallas Stars has been fined $140,000 for polluting a lake during renovations of his vacation property in Kamloops, B.C.

    Dallas Stars' Owner Fined $140,000 For Damaging Fish Habitat During Renovations In Kamloops

    Six-term New Democrat MP Libby Davies won't run again in 2015

    Six-term New Democrat MP Libby Davies won't run again in 2015
    VANCOUVER — Federal New Democrat Libby Davies says being elected to her Vancouver riding six times is enough and that she won't be running in next year's election.

    Six-term New Democrat MP Libby Davies won't run again in 2015