Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Killer Of Missing Alberta Seniors Loses Appeal Of Manslaughter Convictions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 May, 2019 08:07 PM

    EDMONTON — An appeal from the killer of two Edmonton-area seniors has been dismissed.

     

    Travis Vader asked the Alberta Court of Appeal for a new trial or for his manslaughter charges to be stayed.


    Vader was sentenced in 2017 to life in prison for the deaths of Lyle and Marie McCann, who vanished in 2010 while setting out on a camping trip.


    His lawyers argued the trial judge should have dismissed his case because it took so long to work its way through the court system.


    The lawyers also said the judge made errors and showed bias when he substituted the lesser offence of manslaughter for two second-degree murder verdicts.


    Three Appeal judges agreed that a reasonable person would think Vader was treated fairly at trial.


    "We see no prejudice having befallen the appellant as a consequence of the trial judge’s analysis, and no benefit in a retrial to test again whether the appellant should have been convicted of manslaughter in the robbery killing of the McCanns," the judges wrote in a unanimous decision released Friday.


    During the trial in 2016, Vader was described as a desperate drug addict who came across the McCanns and killed them during a robbery.


    Court heard the couple's burned-out motorhome and a vehicle they had been towing were discovered in the days after they disappeared. Their bodies have never been found.


    Vader was charged with first-degree murder in 2012. The charges against were stayed in March 2014 but were reinstated a few months later.


    Vader had sought to have the charges thrown out on the grounds his constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated. Justice Denny Thomas dismissed the application six months before a landmark 2016 Supreme Court of Canada decision that set limits on how long cases should take in court.


    The Jordan decision says cases should take 18 months in provincial courts and 30 months in superior courts, with some exceptions. It included a provision for cases already underway at the time of the ruling, such as Vader's.


    The Appeal Court said it took 58 months from when Vader was charged until he was sentenced. But they said the delay was justified, given the unusual nature of the case.


    "The complexity of this case, including the difficulties associated with prosecuting a murder trial 'without a body,' though not a full answer, was a significant factor in justifying the delay," the judges said in their decision.


    "In conclusion, although the trial took substantially longer to complete than the 30-month presumptive ceiling, we think that in light of the extraordinary circumstances of this case, the delay was not unreasonable and that the appellant’s submission must fail."


    The defence had argued the RCMP was negligent in the handling of disclosure in the trial, which added two years of delay to the prosecution.


    The lawyers also noted Thomas mistakenly used an outdated section of the Criminal Code to initially convict Vader of second-degree murder. He later substituted the verdict with manslaughter.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Doles Out Millions In Federal Government Cash For Anti-Gang Programs

    B.C. Doles Out Millions In Federal Government Cash For Anti-Gang Programs
    The British Columbia government has announced where it's directing federal government funds in the fight against gun and gang violence in the province.

    B.C. Doles Out Millions In Federal Government Cash For Anti-Gang Programs

    'I Tried To Bury It Down': NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Reveals He Was Abused As A Child

    Canada’s Indian-origin opposition leader Jagmeet Singh has revealed that he was abused by his taekwondo teacher when he was 10 saying it is one of his regrets in life that he kept quiet about the assault.

    'I Tried To Bury It Down': NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Reveals He Was Abused As A Child

    See Pics, VIDEOS: Surrey Celebrates A Colourful And Joyful Vaisakhi

    Vaisakhi, the harvest festival, was celebrated in Surrey April 20, with much delight and elation.

    See Pics, VIDEOS: Surrey Celebrates A Colourful And Joyful Vaisakhi

    Sikh Community Has Done Great Job: Kapil Dev Launches Coffee-Table Book 'We The Sikhs'

    "We The Sikhs" celebrates Sikhism and features photographs and original paintings of 100 Gurudwaras across the globe.

    Sikh Community Has Done Great Job: Kapil Dev Launches Coffee-Table Book 'We The Sikhs'

    PICS: Elizabeth May's Wedding Dress A 'Walk Through A Garden' On Earth Day

    VICTORIA — Instead of marching for Earth Day, Green party Leader Elizabeth May marched down the aisle in Victoria's Christ Church Cathedral on Monday.

    PICS: Elizabeth May's Wedding Dress A 'Walk Through A Garden' On Earth Day

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Marks Earth Day With Call For Collective Action

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Marks Earth Day With Call For Collective Action
    VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier John Horgan is marking Earth Day by reaffirming his government's commitment to rise to the challenge of climate change.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Marks Earth Day With Call For Collective Action