Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

N.S. Man Guilty Of Thrill Killing In Case That Used Beyond-The-Grave Testimony

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2016 12:47 PM
    SYDNEY, N.S. — A judge has found a Nova Scotia man guilty of murdering a 19-year-old woman solely for thrills, in a case that turned partly on evidence from a dead witness. 
     
    Thomas Ted Barrett, 41, strangled Brett MacKinnon because watching her die "excited" him, said Judge Robin Gogan.
     
    MacKinnon's decayed remains were found in 2008 near a Glace Bay hiking trail, two years after she went missing. It is the first of two murder trials for Barrett involving young female victims.
     
    On Monday in Nova Scotia Supreme Court, Gogan said she accepted evidence from Crown witnesses who said Barrett had told them he'd killed MacKinnon with his bare hands. 
     
    The Crown case relied partly on Sheryl Ann Flynn's videotaped account of Barrett telling her in 2006 that he felt "a rush'' of adrenaline as his hands tightened on MacKinnon's throat.
     
    Gogan said during her decision that Flynn's evidence, given before her overdose death, was weakened because she couldn't be cross examined by defence counsel.
     
    However, she also said similar testimony from other Crown witnesses was consistent with a "bizarre pattern of disclosure" by Barrett to acquaintances and girlfriends that built a case proving his guilt.
     
    "It belies coincidence," said Gogan.
     
    The defence had painted a picture of Flynn and other witnesses as drug addicts with criminal records, saying their credibility was suspect.
     
    The prosecution had countered that Flynn's memories were consistent with other witnesses who described Barrett saying he'd strangled MacKinnon or made a visible gesture indicating he'd strangled her.
     
    In her summary of facts she accepted, Gogan outlined a frightening scene in the last minutes of the young woman's life.
     
    "Mr. Barrett became upset ... He grabbed her and choked her by the throat. He thought he broke her neck," said the judge.
     
    "He continued to strangle her because the act of watching her die excited him."
     
    "He wrapped her in a carpet and in middle of the night took her to a location and disposed of her."
     
    Barrett is also charged in the second-degree murder of Laura Jessome, 21, in 2012, whose remains were discovered May 25 in a hockey bag floating on the Mira River.
     
    Barrett was surrounded by sheriffs when he stood for his verdict in the packed courtroom, but he showed no visible emotion.
     
    MacKinnon's family members wept and some clapped lightly as the verdict was read, but they declined comment as they departed the courtroom.
     
    The judge set down April 13 as the sentencing date in Sydney.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Ranchers Protect 4,500 Hectares Of Land From Development: Conservancy

    B.C. Ranchers Protect 4,500 Hectares Of Land From Development: Conservancy
    INVERMERE, B.C. — A southeastern British Columbia ranch 11 times the size of Stanley Parks has been protected from development by its owners.

    B.C. Ranchers Protect 4,500 Hectares Of Land From Development: Conservancy

    Feds Seek More Cities To Take Syrian Refugees But Will Only Pay Until Next Year

    Feds Seek More Cities To Take Syrian Refugees But Will Only Pay Until Next Year
    OTTAWA — More cities could see Syrian refugees sent their way but federal funds to help support them will only last until March 2017.

    Feds Seek More Cities To Take Syrian Refugees But Will Only Pay Until Next Year

    Hottest Average Global Temperature Ever Recorded Didn't Apply To Canada In 2015

    Hottest Average Global Temperature Ever Recorded Didn't Apply To Canada In 2015
    Call it cold comfort, but Atlantic Canada was one of the only regions on the planet that had cooler-than-average temperatures last year, according to Environment Canada.

    Hottest Average Global Temperature Ever Recorded Didn't Apply To Canada In 2015

    Alberta Federation Of Labour Says Requiring Doctor's Note A Waste Of Time

    Alberta Federation Of Labour Says Requiring Doctor's Note A Waste Of Time
    EDMONTON — The Alberta Federation of Labour is calling on the provincial government to do away with the longstanding practice of employers asking employees for a doctor's note to verify absences.

    Alberta Federation Of Labour Says Requiring Doctor's Note A Waste Of Time

    Canadian Pacific Railway To Cut 1,000 Positions This Year

    Canadian Pacific Railway To Cut 1,000 Positions This Year
    The Calgary-based company says most of the cuts to unionized and management positions will result from attrition and kick in by mid-year.

    Canadian Pacific Railway To Cut 1,000 Positions This Year

    Kamloops B.C., Family Saved From Carbon Monoxide Poisoning By Crying Toddler

    Kamloops B.C., Family Saved From Carbon Monoxide Poisoning By Crying Toddler
    Fifteen-month-old Celia Rupple is being credited with saving her life, the lives of her parents, and the family's several cats and dogs after carbon monoxide filled their Kamloops

    Kamloops B.C., Family Saved From Carbon Monoxide Poisoning By Crying Toddler