Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Judge Tosses Evidence, Acquits Saskatchewan Lovers Of Plotting To Kill Spouses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 May, 2019 08:26 PM
  • Judge Tosses Evidence, Acquits Saskatchewan Lovers Of Plotting To Kill Spouses

PRINCE ALBERT, Alta. — A Saskatchewan judge has acquitted a man and a woman of conspiracy to murder their spouses.


The judge entered the verdict after ruling that a key audio recording was inadmissible in the trial of Curtis Vey and Angela Nicholson.


A jury initially convicted them in 2016 and they were each sentenced to three years in prison.


The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal, in ordering a new trial last year, said the judge didn't make it clear jurors must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the two intended to commit murder.


Court heard that Vey, who is from Wakaw, Sask., and Nicholson, who is from nearby Melfort, were having an affair.


They were arrested in 2013 after Vey's wife made a secret recording that appeared to suggest the pair was plotting to kill her and Nicholson's husband.


The jury heard that Vey's wife was to die in a house fire and Nicholson's husband was to be drugged and disappear.


Vey and Nicholson said there was no intent behind the plot.


Vey told police that he knew his wife was recording him and talked about the murder plot to give his wife and family something to talk about. Nicholson told officers she never intended to carry out the plan.


Vey's wife, Brigitte Vey, said outside the courthouse in Prince Albert, Sask., after Monday's ruling that she is OK with the acquittal.


"I'm at peace that it's finally over," she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police And Indigenous Blockades Going Up, Work To Begin Again On B.C. Pipeline

Senior officers in the RCMP's Indigenous liaison unit were also going to the site, which has been the centre of growing tensions in a dispute over the pipeline and Indigenous claims to the land.

Police And Indigenous Blockades Going Up, Work To Begin Again On B.C. Pipeline

Arson Probed In Loss Of Murray Church, Fire At Second Merritt, B.C. Church

Arson Probed In Loss Of Murray Church, Fire At Second Merritt, B.C. Church
A nearly 150-year-old church has been destroyed by a suspicious fire in British Columbia's southern Interior, one of two blazes at Merritt-area churches early Friday.

Arson Probed In Loss Of Murray Church, Fire At Second Merritt, B.C. Church

Alleged Voyeur Arrested After Incident With Cellphone In UBC washroom

A police news release says officers at the Point Grey campus were called on Jan. 3.

Alleged Voyeur Arrested After Incident With Cellphone In UBC washroom

Crown Lawyer Tells B.C. Bail Hearing Convicted Killer Had Time To Kill His Wife

Crown Lawyer Tells B.C. Bail Hearing Convicted Killer Had Time To Kill His Wife
Hank Reiner told B.C. Supreme Court that Shiffington went to an apartment in Richmond in September 1994, knowing the friend who Wanda Martin was visiting would be out briefly.

Crown Lawyer Tells B.C. Bail Hearing Convicted Killer Had Time To Kill His Wife

Supreme Court Set To Rule On Voting Rights For Long-Term Expat Canadians

Supreme Court Set To Rule On Voting Rights For Long-Term Expat Canadians
TORONTO — Long-term Canadian expats are set to find out on Friday whether a 25-year-old law barring them from voting in federal elections is constitutional.

Supreme Court Set To Rule On Voting Rights For Long-Term Expat Canadians

Yukon Woman's Role In Klondike Gold Rush To Be Honoured At Toronto Ceremony

WHITEHORSE — An Indigenous woman is being inducted into the Canadian Mining Hall of Fame for the first time.

Yukon Woman's Role In Klondike Gold Rush To Be Honoured At Toronto Ceremony