Close X
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jury deciding fate of accused in explosion that killed disabled Alberta woman

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2015 11:45 AM

    RED DEER, Alta. — The fate of a central Alberta financial adviser accused of killing his disabled client with a bomb made to look like a Christmas present is now with a jury.

    Brian Malley is charged with first-degree murder in the death of single mother Victoria Shachtay.

    She died in November 2011 when she opened what turned out to be a homemade pipe bomb that had been left on her doorstep in Innisfail, Alta.

    Jury members retired for deliberations after the trial judge instructed them Tuesday morning.

    During closing arguments on Monday, the Crown argued that Malley killed Shachtay to cut his losses after he began paying her out of his own pocket when he lost almost all of her money.

    The defence said there's no incriminating evidence against Malley, 57, and suggested the motive just doesn't make sense.

    Shachtay was paralyzed in a car crash in 2004 when she was 16 and pregnant. Court heard she received a $575,000 court settlement in 2007 and turned to Malley, a family friend, to help her invest the money. She also borrowed another $264,000 to bump up the fund.

    On Nov. 25, 2011, a green-and-gold gift bag was delivered to her door. Her caregiver brought the package inside and Shachtay opened it while sitting in her wheelchair at the kitchen table.

    The 23-year-old was killed instantly. Her caregiver wasn't hurt and Shachtay's daughter wasn't home at the time.

    Court heard that part of Shachtay's money was lost due to drops in the market, but Malley also put some of her funds in high-risk investments.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec government makes sprinklers mandatory in all private seniors' homes

    Quebec government makes sprinklers mandatory in all private seniors' homes
    QUEBEC — The Quebec government is making it mandatory for all existing private seniors' homes to be equipped with automatic sprinklers.

    Quebec government makes sprinklers mandatory in all private seniors' homes

    Two senior editors no longer with Brunswick News Inc. after investigation

    Two senior editors no longer with Brunswick News Inc. after investigation
    MONCTON, N.B. — Two senior editors at a New Brunswick newspaper are no longer with the company after an internal ethics probe alleged one of them visited a government-owned fishing lodge and both tried to alter a guest list to remove his name before it was made public, the ombudswoman for the chain of papers owned by Brunswick News Inc. says.

    Two senior editors no longer with Brunswick News Inc. after investigation

    Saskatchewan names geographic features to honour those who gave lives in service

    Saskatchewan names geographic features to honour those who gave lives in service
    REGINA — Three lakes in northern Saskatchewan have been named after soldiers from the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry who died in Afghanistan.

    Saskatchewan names geographic features to honour those who gave lives in service

    Despite sore joints, aching muscles, hockey players set new record for longest game

    Despite sore joints, aching muscles, hockey players set new record for longest game
    EDMONTON — A group of sore, exhausted but happy players in the Edmonton region have set a new unofficial record for the world's longest hockey game.

    Despite sore joints, aching muscles, hockey players set new record for longest game

    Deported Indian Man Sues Over 'Miscarriage Of Justice' In Wrongful Sex-Assault Conviction

    Deported Indian Man Sues Over 'Miscarriage Of Justice' In Wrongful Sex-Assault Conviction
    Gurdev Singh Dhillon was convicted of sexual assault in 2005, imprisoned and deported to India in 2008. But a special prosecutor found Crown counsel didn't disclose DNA evidence that pointed to three other men — something the B.C. Appeal Court cited when it threw out the conviction last year.

    Deported Indian Man Sues Over 'Miscarriage Of Justice' In Wrongful Sex-Assault Conviction

    Hawksworth Scholarship Young Chefs Competition Seeks Entrants

    Hawksworth Scholarship Young Chefs Competition Seeks Entrants
    VANCOUVER — Applications are being accepted for young Canadian chefs looking to win $10,000 in a national culinary competition.

    Hawksworth Scholarship Young Chefs Competition Seeks Entrants