Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Man Accused Of Plotting To Kill Wife, Lover's Husband, Says It Was Just Talk

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2016 12:48 PM
  • Man Accused Of Plotting To Kill Wife, Lover's Husband, Says It Was Just Talk
PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — The trial of two lovers accused of plotting to murder their spouses heard one of the accused tell an undercover officer it was just talk.
 
Angela Nicholson, 51, and Curtis Vey, 52, are on trial in Prince Albert court on charges of conspiring to kill their spouses, Brigitte Vey and Jim Taylor.
 
The jury listened Tuesday to audio of Curtis Vey in a cell talking to an undercover RCMP officer on July 6, 2013 — the day he was arrested.
 
Much of the recording is Vey and the officer discussing jail food, Vey's farm equipment and the names scratched into the walls of the cell.
 
Vey also tells the officer that he and Nicholson talked about killing Nicholson's husband, but added, "people talk all the time."
 
He also said RCMP took his phone and cellphone, but said police wouldn't find anything.
 
"I got nothing to hide, they can go through all the paperwork they want…all they'll catch is a few emails to a couple women, but that's not incriminating anyways."
 
Court has already heard that Brigette Vey hid an iPod under the kitchen table at their farmhouse in Wakaw, Sask., and recorded her husband and Nicholson.
 
On that tape previously played in court, Vey and Nicholson are heard talking about doctoring Taylor's coffee with sleeping pills, making him disappear, and planting a will that would leave everything to Nicholson and her two daughters.
 
The pair also talk about using sleeping pills on Vey's wife and setting Vey's house on fire.
 
The trial is expected to finish on Friday.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal Government To Spend $500,000 To Gather Data On Foreign Homebuyers

Federal Government To Spend $500,000 To Gather Data On Foreign Homebuyers
Ottawa is spending $500,000 to help understand the role of foreign homebuyers in the country's housing market.

Federal Government To Spend $500,000 To Gather Data On Foreign Homebuyers

Cost Of Syrian Refugee Program Will Near $1 Billion With New Money In Budget

Cost Of Syrian Refugee Program Will Near $1 Billion With New Money In Budget
OTTAWA — The marquee Liberal commitment to Syrian refugee resettlement could end up costing taxpayers close to $1 billion.

Cost Of Syrian Refugee Program Will Near $1 Billion With New Money In Budget

Video Of Woman Pitching Coffee At Man Over Disabled Parking Spot At Tim Hortons Goes Viral

Video Of Woman Pitching Coffee At Man Over Disabled Parking Spot At Tim Hortons Goes Viral
People take to social media to support Toronto man who confronted woman outside Tim Horton's

Video Of Woman Pitching Coffee At Man Over Disabled Parking Spot At Tim Hortons Goes Viral

B.C. Information And Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham Takes Job In U.K

  Denham has been B.C.'s information and privacy commissioner since 2010 and her term ends in July.

B.C. Information And Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham Takes Job In U.K

B.C. Says Federal Budget Sets Stage For Major Infrastructure Projects

British Columbia's Liberal government says Tuesday's federal budget signals a good start towards investing in provincial infrastructure projects.

B.C. Says Federal Budget Sets Stage For Major Infrastructure Projects

Flag Attacked By Critics As Homophobic Taken Down At Legislature In St. John's

Flag Attacked By Critics As Homophobic Taken Down At Legislature In St. John's
A statement from the provincial Liberal government says the flag featuring a red cross was removed from a courtesy pole as other flags were lowered to half-mast.

Flag Attacked By Critics As Homophobic Taken Down At Legislature In St. John's