Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

More DNA Evidence Presented At First-Degree Murder Trial Of Travis Vader

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Apr, 2016 11:44 AM
    EDMONTON — The trial of a man accused of killing an elderly Edmonton-area couple has heard their blood was found on items in their SUV.
     
    An RCMP scientist testified Friday that a ball cap discovered on the floor below the back seat had Lyle McCann's blood on it while blood from his wife, Marie, was found on canned goods in the back of the vehicle.
     
    The scientist also testified that DNA from a second person was also found on the hat and that it was a possible match to accused Travis Vader — with only a one-in-140,000 chance it could belong to someone else.
     
    Vader is charged with two counts of first-degree murder.
     
    The McCanns, both in their late 70s, vanished in the summer of 2010 after they set out on a road trip to British Columbia. Their bodies have never been found.
     
    Defence lawyer Brian Beresh noted the possible DNA match to Vader wasn't found until a second DNA test was done.
     
     
     
    Beresh has repeatedly tried to poke holes in the DNA evidence presented by the Crown, suggesting on Thursday that sneezing into a vehicle or onto items might be enough to transfer DNA.
     
    The McCanns were last seen driving their motorhome with their green Hyundai Tucson towed behind it as they set out from St. Albert, a bedroom community north of Edmonton, on July 3, 2010.
     
    Two days later their motorhome was found burning in the bush in the Peers area. Their SUV was later found hidden in some trees on a nearby rural property.
     
    The Crown alleges Vader was a desperate drug user on the run from police, and living in a makeshift camp in the region, when he came across the McCanns and killed them. The defence has suggested there's not enough evidence to prove the couple is really dead and that police should have looked at other suspects.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Finds ICBC Liable For Malicious Prosecution, Awards Refugee Woman Nearly $400,000

    Judge Finds ICBC Liable For Malicious Prosecution, Awards Refugee Woman Nearly $400,000
    A British Columbia judge has awarded a woman who "experienced the wrath" of the province's insurance corporation nearly $400,000.

    Judge Finds ICBC Liable For Malicious Prosecution, Awards Refugee Woman Nearly $400,000

    Maple Batalia Murder: Ex-boyfriend Gurjinder 'Gary' Dhaliwal Pleads Guilty To Second-Degree Murder

    When those details came out in court, Batalia’s mother burst into tears

    Maple Batalia Murder: Ex-boyfriend Gurjinder 'Gary' Dhaliwal Pleads Guilty To Second-Degree Murder

    Ottawa Man Finds 'Huge Pile Of Junk' In Driveway; Police Look For Junk's Owner

    Ottawa Man Finds 'Huge Pile Of Junk' In Driveway; Police Look For Junk's Owner
    Kit Pullen woke up Wednesday morning to piles of furniture stacked outside his garage door.

    Ottawa Man Finds 'Huge Pile Of Junk' In Driveway; Police Look For Junk's Owner

    Why Luxury Home Sales In Toronto, Vancouver To 'Continue To Defy Gravity'

    Why Luxury Home Sales In Toronto, Vancouver To 'Continue To Defy Gravity'
    Toronto and Vancouver will continue to lead luxury home sales in Canada this spring in both volume and price, and mostly for the same reasons they dominated last year

    Why Luxury Home Sales In Toronto, Vancouver To 'Continue To Defy Gravity'

    CBSA Seizes 118 Kg Of Cocaine At Toronto Airport In Shipment From Mexico

    CBSA Seizes 118 Kg Of Cocaine At Toronto Airport In Shipment From Mexico
    Canada Border Services Agency says it has seized about 118 kilograms of cocaine at Toronto Pearson International Airport

    CBSA Seizes 118 Kg Of Cocaine At Toronto Airport In Shipment From Mexico

    Hamed Shafia, Convicted Of Family Murders, Was 17, Not 18, Lawyer Argues In Court

    Hamed Shafia, Convicted Of Family Murders, Was 17, Not 18, Lawyer Argues In Court
    Hamed Shafia's lawyer is asking Ontario's top court to admit fresh evidence which he says proves the man was in fact 17 and not 18 and a half when his relatives were found dead, and should not have been tried by an adult court.

    Hamed Shafia, Convicted Of Family Murders, Was 17, Not 18, Lawyer Argues In Court