Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Judge Expected To Address Jury At Guy Turcotte Murder Trial In Quebec

The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2015 10:44 AM
  • Judge Expected To Address Jury At Guy Turcotte Murder Trial In Quebec
SAINT-JEROME, Que. — A Quebec judge is expected to address the jury on Wednesday as a second trial gets going for a former Quebec cardiologist who is charged with first-degree murder in the deaths of his two children.
 
Seven men and five women will decide Guy Turcotte's fate at a trial that is expected to last three months and feature about 30 witnesses called by the Crown.
 
Turcotte, 43, pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to the murder charges in the 2009 deaths of Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3.
 
The story riveted Quebecers for weeks in 2011 as a lengthy trial heard how the popular doctor in a town north of Montreal came to be charged
 
Quebec's top court ruled in 2013 that Turcotte should stand trial again after concluding the trial judge had erred in his directives to the jury.
 
The Supreme Court of Canada refused to hear Turcotte's attempt to have the new case dismissed.
 
The five women on the new jury include a waitress, a fashion adviser, an esthetician, a butcher and a secretary.
 
Three of the men are retired, with one having been a teacher, another a printing supervisor and the third a businessman in cabinetmaking.
 
There is also a real-estate broker, an engineer, a box-store employee and an out-of-work merchant.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal Government 'Well Ahead' On Path To Surplus, PM Harper Says

Federal Government 'Well Ahead' On Path To Surplus, PM Harper Says
And while Finance Minister Joe Oliver didn’t respond to a call from the Liberals to prove his projections for a small surplus are intact, Harper insisted his government’s balanced budget pledge isn’t merely an election-year fairy tale.

Federal Government 'Well Ahead' On Path To Surplus, PM Harper Says

Will Not Entrench Status Quo: Harper Announces Moratorium On Senate Appointments

Will Not Entrench Status Quo: Harper Announces Moratorium On Senate Appointments
REGINA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Friday a moratorium on Senate appointments — formalizing his practice over the past two and a half years of refusing to fill vacancies in the scandal-plagued upper house.

Will Not Entrench Status Quo: Harper Announces Moratorium On Senate Appointments

NDP Would Not Have Representation In Senate While Pushing For Abolition: Mulcair

WATERLOO, Ont. — NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says even though his party has no representation in the Senate, he would not make any appointments while negotiating with provinces to abolish the chamber.

NDP Would Not Have Representation In Senate While Pushing For Abolition: Mulcair

Kanye West, Pitbull To Perform At Toronto's Pan Am Games Closing Ceremony

Kanye West, Pitbull To Perform At Toronto's Pan Am Games Closing Ceremony
The Chicago hip-hop artist will be joined by Serena Ryder of Millbrook, Ont., and Miami pop-rapper Pitbull for the ceremony, to be held at Toronto's Rogers Centre.

Kanye West, Pitbull To Perform At Toronto's Pan Am Games Closing Ceremony

Saskatchewan And The Senate: Why Harper's Policy Pronouncement Came Now

Saskatchewan And The Senate: Why Harper's Policy Pronouncement Came Now
OTTAWA — When the Calgary Stampede ends and the last pancakes are flipped, the white cowboy hats put away in their boxes, Stephen Harper usually heads to the official prime minister's summer residence at Harrington Lake.

Saskatchewan And The Senate: Why Harper's Policy Pronouncement Came Now

Justice Minister Peter MacKay Announces Millions To Implement New Victims Bill Of Rights

HALIFAX — The federal goverment has announced $54 million in funding to support the implementation of the new Canadian Victims Bill of Rights.

Justice Minister Peter MacKay Announces Millions To Implement New Victims Bill Of Rights