Close X
Saturday, December 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jury Urged To Find Melonie Biddersingh Drowned In Unclear Circumstances

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jan, 2016 12:10 PM
    TORONTO — The defence at a trial involving the death of a teenage girl whose body was found stuffed in a burning suitcase is urging jurors to accept forensic evidence that she drowned.
     
    Lawyer Jennifer Penman tells the Toronto jury there is no evidence as to how Melonie Biddersingh drowned.
     
    Given the uncertainty, Penman says jurors must acquit her father, Everton Biddersingh, 60, of first-degree murder.
     
    Court has heard from the stepmother and brother about the terrible abuse 17-year-old Biddersingh endured before her death.
     
    Penman says convicting her father on the basis of what she termed their self-serving testimony would be dangerous.
     
    The defence called no witnesses and Biddersingh didn't take the stand in his own defence.
     
    He has pleaded not guilty in the death of his daughter, whose charred body was found 21 years ago. It would be almost two decades before police were able to lay charges.
     
    The Crown argues the teen died Sept. 1, 1994, essentially starved to death.
     
    The trial has previously heard that the teen was confined for hours in a tiny closet, had her head placed in a toilet that was flushed, was chained to the furniture at times, was denied food and was kicked, punched and thrown against walls by her father.
     
    After she died, the Crown has said, Biddersingh crammed his daughter into a suitcase, drove her to a remote area and set her on fire.
     
    "The tragedy of this young woman's death may easily overwhelm our imaginations," Penman said in her closing argument. "A lot of terrible things went on in that apartment."
     
    Penman said her weakened state might have been a factor in her death.
     
    "That is not the same thing as saying starvation was the cause of death," the lawyer said.
     
    Biddersingh's wife, Elaine, whom the defence said "hated" the teen, faces her own murder trial in April.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mining Magnate Peter Munk Admits To Donating More Than Legal Limit To Conservatives

    Mining Magnate Peter Munk Admits To Donating More Than Legal Limit To Conservatives
    Munk, the founder of mining giant Barrick Gold Corp., signed a compliance agreement with Elections Canada earlier this month, acknowledging that in 2008, 2010 and 2012 his donations exceeded the maximum allowable contributions in those years.

    Mining Magnate Peter Munk Admits To Donating More Than Legal Limit To Conservatives

    Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder

    Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder
    The review was announced days after a jury found Dennis Oland guilty in the death of his father, whose body was found in his Saint John office in July 2011.

    Former Crown Prosecutor To Probe Police Handling Of Richard Oland Murder

    Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016

    Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016
    The Vigorous left from Sohar, Oman, on Nov. 30 and crossed the Montreal port's downstream limits at 5:21 Friday morning.

    Bulk Carrier From Marshall Islands Is The First Ship To Reach Montreal In 2016

    How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months

    How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months
    When the Conservative government promised, in January 2015, to resettle 10,000 Syrian refugees over three years, Liberal MP John McCallum didn't buy it.

    How Response To Syrian Refugee Crisis Went From 10k In Three Years To Months

    Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week

    Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week
    Officers in Richmond, B.C., responded Wednesday afternoon to multiple reports of a 21-year-old woman covered in blood, fending off a large Rottweiler cross on an outdoor field. Police had previously identified the animal as a Rottweiler-pit bull cross.

    Woman Critically Injured Defending Toddler In Second B.C. Dog Attack Within Week

    Canadians Go For Frosty New Year's Day Swim In Annual Polar Bear Plunges

    Canadians Go For Frosty New Year's Day Swim In Annual Polar Bear Plunges
    Canadians across the country are participating in a frosty New Year's Day tradition — the polar bear dip.

    Canadians Go For Frosty New Year's Day Swim In Annual Polar Bear Plunges