Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jury weighs fate of Toronto-area woman accused of ordering hit on her parents

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2014 11:01 AM

    NEWMARKET, Ont. — A Toronto-area jury is now weighing the fate of a woman accused of plotting to have her parents killed in a phoney home invasion because they disapproved of her boyfriend.

    Jennifer Pan, 28, is charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder in the attack that killed her mother, 53-year-old Bieh Ha Pan, and left her father, 60-year-old Hann Pan, on the brink of death.

    Three others — Lenford Crawford, David Mylvaganam and her on-again, off-again boyfriend Daniel Wong — are also facing the same charges in the Nov. 8, 2010 slaying at the Pan's Markham, Ont. home.

    A fifth co-accused, Eric Carty, is now to be tried separately after his lawyer fell ill during the 10-month trial.

    In his final instructions before deliberations began, Judge Cary Boswell told the jury they must first decide whether they believe beyond a reasonable doubt there was a plan to commit murder and attempted murder that night.

    If they believe such a plan existed, the judge said, they must then determine whether each defendant participated in the plan, and knew that another accomplice meant to commit murder and attempted murder, and intended to aid and abet them. That would lead to a conviction of first-degree murder and attempted murder, he said.

    Should they conclude there was no murder plan, they must consider whether there was an agreement to commit a robbery — which would make Pan a victim along with her parents, he said. Pan's lawyer has argued that the attack was a robbery gone wrong, and that his client had no role in organizing it.

    In that case, the jury should decide whether each of the other accused took part in that agreement, and whether they knew that someone would probably commit murder and attempted murder during the robbery, Boswell said. If yes, then the accused in question would be guilty of second-degree murder and attempted murder, he said.

    Jurors can also find that a defendant didn't know murder or attempted murder were likely to happen, but that a reasonable person could have foreseen there was a "risk of harm" to the Pans in carrying out the robbery, the judge said, noting that all three intruders had guns.

    If so, that would lead to a manslaughter conviction, he said.

    Prosecutors allege Pan came up with the murder plan after receiving an ultimatum from her parents, forcing her to choose between Wong and her family.

    The couple had recently discovered that much of what their daughter had told them about her life — including that she had graduated university and was living with a friend — was part of an elaborate deception built over roughly 10 years, court heard. Finding out she was in fact living with Wong was the final straw, the jury heard.

    Pan and Wong secretly stayed in touch but their relationship grew strained, prosecutors said during trial. She nonetheless asked him for help in planning the hit, the Crown alleges, painting Wong and Crawford as middle-men between Pan and the intruders.

    Exactly who shot her parents remains unclear, with Pan saying on the stand that she didn't recognize the intruders among the accused.

    The defence suggested Carty was behind the robbery because he was desperate for money and knew Pan would be an easy target. Court has heard Carty is currently serving a life sentence in a 2009 murder.

    Pan, meanwhile, testified she knew nothing about the attack and never wanted her mother to die.

    Months earlier, bristling under her parents' strict rules and expectations, Pan tried to have her father killed, she admitted on the stand. But the plan fell through when the man she hired took off with her money, and Pan gave up on the idea, she said.

    It was her own death she was trying to arrange, Pan said, saying she had fallen into a deep depression as her family life crumbled. She abandoned that plan, too, when her relationship with her parents appeared to be on the mend in the fall of 2010, she testified.

    Calling off her suicide plan meant paying the would-be hit man — a man she knew only as Homeboy — $8,500 in cancellation fees, Pan told the court. She had been collecting the money the day of the attack, she said. Prosecutors allege Homeboy is a nickname for Crawford.

    Pan initially appeared to be a victim in the home invasion, telling police three men broke into the house and tied her up before shooting her parents.

    Her story started to fall apart once it became clear her father would survive, the Crown said. She was arrested Nov. 22, 2010, shortly after he was well enough to speak with investigators.

    Wong's lawyer said there is no direct evidence his client played a role in the attack, which happened while Wong was at work.

    Crawford was also at work, and in no way involved in planning or carrying out the events of that night, his defence lawyer said.

    Mylvaganam has admitted he was at the home to help commit a robbery and that a reasonable person could have known there was a chance the Pans would get hurt. But his lawyer said Mylvaganam didn't shoot anyone, nor did he expect anyone to die.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought
    VANCOUVER — Scientists who re-examined the fossils of mastodons that once roamed what is now the Yukon and Alaska have changed their thinking and now believe global cooling probably wiped out the ancient cousin of the elephant.

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey
    TORONTO — Long reliant on paper-based patient files, the majority of Canadian doctors have now moved firmly into the 21st century, using electronic medical records and other forms of information technology to run their practices, a survey has found.

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey

    Woman kept dead husband's body because she thought he would be resurrected: Crown

    Woman kept dead husband's body because she thought he would be resurrected: Crown
    HAMILTON — A devoutly religious Hamilton woman who kept her husband's decomposing corpse in a bedroom for six months because she was convinced he would come back to life has pleaded guilty to failing to notify authorities of his death from an illness he was not getting treatment for.

    Woman kept dead husband's body because she thought he would be resurrected: Crown

    Mall shooting trial hears jury choice is between mental disorder and revenge

    Mall shooting trial hears jury choice is between mental disorder and revenge
    TORONTO — A forensic psychiatrist has conceded under cross-examination by the Crown that the man who shot up Toronto's Eaton Centre may have been motivated by revenge.

    Mall shooting trial hears jury choice is between mental disorder and revenge

    Canadian teacher goes on trial accused of child abuse at Indonesian school

    Canadian teacher goes on trial accused of child abuse at Indonesian school
    JAKARTA, Indonesia — A Canadian teacher and a teaching assistant went on trial Tuesday in Indonesia accused of sexually abusing a kindergarten student at an international school.

    Canadian teacher goes on trial accused of child abuse at Indonesian school

    Concerns about E. coli prompt ground beef recall in Western Canada

    Concerns about E. coli prompt ground beef recall in Western Canada
    OTTAWA — Federal health officials are recalling packages of ground beef produced by food giant Cargill due to concerns about E. coli.

    Concerns about E. coli prompt ground beef recall in Western Canada