Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

'My Daughter Cries Out For Justice From Her Grave,' Manslaughter Sentencing Hearing For Ex-Pastor In His Pregnant Wife's Death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 May, 2019 08:29 PM

    TORONTO — The mother of a pregnant woman whose husband was found guilty of manslaughter says she has spent the past seven years grieving not only for her daughter, but also for her unborn grandchild.


    Charito (Maria) Darvin told a sentencing hearing that her world caved in around her when she learned Anna Grandine — who went by her middle name Karissa — had drowned in her bathtub.

     

    In February, a jury found ex-pastor Philip Grandine guilty of manslaughter in the death of his wife, who was found with an anti-anxiety drug in her system when she drowned in October 2011 despite not being prescribed the medication.


    The Crown alleged Grandine secretly sedated his wife so that he could carry on an affair with a friend of hers, but the defence argued that the woman took the drug herself.


    Prosecutors are asking for a sentence of 13 to 15 years in prison based on the belief that Grandine drugged his wife.


    The defence has asked for 18 months to two years based on their assertion that the former pastor simply knew his wife was using the drugs and allowed her to get into the bathtub.


    Justice Faye McWatt will decide on those facts before delivering her sentence.


    Darvin says when she first learned of her daughter's death, she questioned where Grandine was when his wife got in the bath.


    "As a Christian, I say I forgive him. But I cannot condone his lawless act," she told the court in an emotional victim impact statement.


    "I recognize that this lawlessness was done first of all against God, against Karissa, their unborn baby and the rest of society. Therefore there must be a just punishment for this heinous act, as my daughter cries out for justice from her grave."


    Darvin described her daughter, who was 29 years old and 20 weeks pregnant when she died, as a loving and deeply faithful woman.


    "She had a forgiving heart, as she even forgave the woman who had an illicit relationship with her husband, who had been a friend to them and a member of their congregation," she said.


    Grandine had previously been tried for first-degree murder in his wife's death and was found guilty of manslaughter, but the conviction was overturned on appeal.


    Ontario's highest court found the trial judge made an error when answering a question from the jury in that case and ordered a new trial on the manslaughter charge. That meant prosecutors could no longer argue that Grandine meant to kill his wife.

     

    Photo: Humphrey Funeral Home

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Soaking Wet Arrest After Baby Allegedly Grabbed In Bizarre Kelowna, B.C. Incident

    Mounties say in a release that a family was walking with the baby through a waterfront park near the downtown core around 2:30 p.m. Sunday when the baby was grabbed.

    Soaking Wet Arrest After Baby Allegedly Grabbed In Bizarre Kelowna, B.C. Incident

    Wayson Choy, Celebrated Author Of 'The Jade Peony,' Has Died

    VANCOUVER — Wayson Choy, the celebrated author of "The Jade Peony" and a powerful voice for the Chinese-Canadian community, has died.

    Wayson Choy, Celebrated Author Of 'The Jade Peony,' Has Died

    Travel Delays, Cancellations Continue After High Winds Damage B.C. Ferry

    Travel Delays, Cancellations Continue After High Winds Damage B.C. Ferry
    VICTORIA — Powerful winds that swept across southern British Columbia this weekend have abated, but the effects are still being felt by travellers on one ferry route between Vancouver Island and the mainland.

    Travel Delays, Cancellations Continue After High Winds Damage B.C. Ferry

    Feds Falling Short On Promise To Provide Better Case Management To Vets

    Feds Falling Short On Promise To Provide Better Case Management To Vets
    The federal government is blaming a surprise increase in the number of veterans seeking assistance for its failure to make good on a key Liberal promise of ensuring enough case managers to help those in need.

    Feds Falling Short On Promise To Provide Better Case Management To Vets

    Bolster No-Fly List Appeal Process, Academics And Rights Advocates Urge Senators

    Bolster No-Fly List Appeal Process, Academics And Rights Advocates Urge Senators
    Academics and civil liberties advocates are telling senators the Liberal government's sweeping national-security bill doesn't go far enough to protect the rights of people ensnared by Canada's no-fly list.  

    Bolster No-Fly List Appeal Process, Academics And Rights Advocates Urge Senators

    Police In New Westminster, B.C., Arrest Suspect After Gunshot Victim Dies Near Hume Park

    Police in New Westminster, B.C. say they have a suspect in custody in connection with a new homicide case.

    Police In New Westminster, B.C., Arrest Suspect After Gunshot Victim Dies Near Hume Park