Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Newfoundland Man Pleads Not Guilty In Case Of Skeleton Stolen From Graveyard

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 May, 2019 07:39 PM

    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A young Newfoundland man pleaded not guilty Wednesday in the strange case of skeletal remains taken from an Anglican cemetery.


    Lucas Dawe, 20, appeared briefly from prison via video link on charges of interfering with human remains and possession of stolen property — namely, the remains.


    The Crown also amended the charges to date from November 2017 to April 2019, suggesting the remains may have been removed more than a year before their discovery last month on a recreational trail. The charges initially alleged the crimes occurred "on or about" April 5, 2019.


    The bizarre crime has gripped the community since police launched an investigation into "quite old" partial skeletal remains found on April 6.
    The remains were traced back to an Anglican cemetery in Conception Bay South, a town of about 26,000 people just west of St. John's.


    The province's chief medical examiner, Dr. Nash Denic, told The Canadian Press in April that the remains were taken from a mausoleum-style tomb and belonged to someone who died in the 1800s.


    Denic said at the time it was the first alleged grave robbery he'd seen in the province.


    Dawe, a Conception Bay South resident, is also charged with failing to comply with a court order, stemming from earlier charges.


    A trial has been set for July 9.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Summer Gigs: Canadian Girls Typically Earn Less Than Boys, Survey Suggests

    TORONTO — Canadian girls and boys are about equally as likely to have summer jobs but young females on average earn roughly 30 per cent less than their male counterparts, a recent survey suggests.

    Summer Gigs: Canadian Girls Typically Earn Less Than Boys, Survey Suggests

    Canadian Drug Makers Hit With $1.1B Suit For Pushing Opioids Despite Risks

    Canadian Drug Makers Hit With $1.1B Suit For Pushing Opioids Despite Risks
    TORONTO — Canadian drug makers are facing a $1.1-billion lawsuit for their role in the opioid crisis.    

    Canadian Drug Makers Hit With $1.1B Suit For Pushing Opioids Despite Risks

    Irregular Asylum Claims Fall As Experts Warn Of Populist Backlash

    OTTAWA — The number of asylum-seekers crossing the border "irregularly" into Canada has slowed compared to early last year.

    Irregular Asylum Claims Fall As Experts Warn Of Populist Backlash

    DARPAN 10 with Baltej Singh Dhillon

    RCMP Officer & Member of One Voice Canada Society

    DARPAN 10 with Baltej Singh Dhillon

    Facebook Takes Down Anti-Vaxxer Page That Used Falsified Image Of Girl Who Died

    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — The mother of a young Newfoundland girl says she's relieved a social media company has disabled a site that used images of her dead daughter to promote an anti-vaccination campaign.

    Facebook Takes Down Anti-Vaxxer Page That Used Falsified Image Of Girl Who Died

    Marie-Claude Bibeau Presses Chinese Counterpart On Canola Ban At G20 Ministers' Meeting

    Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau says she used a G20 ministers' meeting in Japan to press her Chinese counterpart for the evidence behind Beijing's bans on Canadian canola.

    Marie-Claude Bibeau Presses Chinese Counterpart On Canola Ban At G20 Ministers' Meeting