Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario's Jennifer Pan Found Guilty In Attack On Her Parents

The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2014 09:48 PM
    NEWMARKET, Ont. — A woman convicted of orchestrating a phoney home invasion that left her mother dead and father seriously injured wept as a Toronto-area jury handed down its verdict on Saturday after a lengthy trial.
     
    Jennifer Pan, 28, dropped her head in silence as the first-degree murder verdict was read against her in a Newmarket, Ont., court.
     
    She looked down even further as she received a second conviction of attempted murder. Unlike her three co-accused, the jury was not given the option of finding her guilty on a lesser offence of second-degree murder.
     
    Dressed in all black, Pan later wept into a tissue before being led away in shackles.
     
    The three co-accused, Lenford Crawford, David Mylvaganam and Pan's on-again, off-again boyfriend Daniel Wong, were convicted of the same charges in the attack that killed Pan's mother, 53-year-old Bieh Ha Pan.
     
    Her father, 60-year-old Hann Pan, suffered a critical head wound in the Nov. 8, 2010 attack that occurred at the family's Markham, Ont. home.
     
    Paul Cooper, Pan's lawyer, said his client was "devastated" by the outcome and planned to appeal.
     
    "She's absolutely in shock," Cooper told reporters outside the courthouse after the verdict was handed down in the nine-month trial.
     
    "For her it's been exhausting, for everybody involved, it's been a long, long trial."
     
    He said Pan has tried to reach out to her father and hopes to eventually reconcile with her family.
     
    Prosecutors alleged Pan hatched the plan after her parents forced her to choose between them and Wong, her high-school sweetheart turned drug dealer.
     
    The ultimatum came after the Pans discovered their daughter had been lying to them for nearly a decade, forging report cards and diplomas and telling them she shared an apartment with a friend when in fact she was living with Wong.
     
    Forced to return home and give up her relationship with the man she loved, Pan first tried to have her father killed, she admitted during trial. But she gave up that plan when the man she hired took off with her money, she said.
     
    Months later, as the rift between her and her parents grew, she came up with another scheme. By then, she and Wong had broken up, but she still reached out to him for help, court heard.
     
    The Crown said she asked her ex-boyfriend to find people who could kill her parents, freeing her from their control and allowing her to live off her generous inheritance. The cost of the hit: $10,000 or $5,000 per parent, prosecutors said.
     
    The arrangements were made through calls and text messages on various phones, including what the Crown called Pan's "secret murder phone," which she hid from her parents, they argued.
     
    But Pan testified she hired someone she knew only as Homeboy to kill her, not her parents, and called off the deal days before the incident as her family life began to improve. She even agreed to pay a $8,500 cancellation fee, and was gathering the money the day of the attack, she said.
     
    In his closing arguments, Pan's lawyer told the court the killing was the result of a robbery gone wrong, and that his client wasn't a murderer, but a victim of crime.
     
    Wong and Crawford's lawyers said their clients weren't at the house that night, and argued there was insufficient evidence to prove they were part of a murder plot.
     
    Wong's lawyer, Laurence Cohen, also said his client intended to appeal.
     
    "He's got a brave face, he's upset and disappointed and obviously shocked but he also knows he believes in the system and he's going to appeal this and hope for the best," Cohen said after the verdict was delivered.
     
    The jury took four days to reach its verdict.
     
    Mylvaganam admitted he was at the home, but said he didn't go inside, nor did he shoot anyone.
     
    As the verdict against him was read out, a woman inside the courtroom ran sobbing into the hall, where she screamed repeatedly.
     
    A first degree murder conviction carries an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.
     
    Formal sentencing is set for Jan. 23.
     
    Another co-accused, Eric Carty, is to be tried separately after his lawyer fell ill during the trial.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. government limits coverage of blood glucose test strips for diabetics

    B.C. government limits coverage of blood glucose test strips for diabetics
    B.C. is imposing yearly limits on tools used by diabetics to test their blood sugar levels.

    B.C. government limits coverage of blood glucose test strips for diabetics

    Uber Banned In Delhi, 'Rapist Driver' Sent To Police Custody

    Uber Banned In Delhi, 'Rapist Driver' Sent To Police Custody
    Three days after one of its drivers raped a woman commuter, "all activities" of global cab company Uber were banned in Delhi Monday and the accused was sent to three days in policy custody to verify his past crimes.

    Uber Banned In Delhi, 'Rapist Driver' Sent To Police Custody

    Calgary Man Accused Of Murdering Missing Spouse After Police Find Remains In Their Home

    Calgary Man Accused Of Murdering Missing Spouse After Police Find Remains In Their Home
    CALGARY — A Calgary man accused of murdering his missing spouse after police found what they believe to be human remains in their home has had his court case put over.

    Calgary Man Accused Of Murdering Missing Spouse After Police Find Remains In Their Home

    Fifth B.C. Farm Under Quarantine Due To Avian Flu

    Fifth B.C. Farm Under Quarantine Due To Avian Flu
    VANCOUVER - A fifth poultry farm has been placed under quarantine in British Columbia's Fraser Valley, where an estimated 140,000 birds are expected to be euthanized to contain the avian flu.

    Fifth B.C. Farm Under Quarantine Due To Avian Flu

    Ontario's Premier Has 'grave Concern' New Sex Laws Unconstitutional, Calls For Review

    Ontario's Premier Has 'grave Concern' New Sex Laws Unconstitutional, Calls For Review
    TORONTO — Ontario's premier has entered the debate over Canada's new prostitution law a day after it took effect, adding her voice to a growing number of groups concerned for sex workers' safety and adding tension to her relationship with the Harper government.

    Ontario's Premier Has 'grave Concern' New Sex Laws Unconstitutional, Calls For Review

    DFO Investigating After Teeth Removed From Dead Orca On Vancouver Island

    DFO Investigating After Teeth Removed From Dead Orca On Vancouver Island
    COURTENAY, B.C. — The Department of Fisheries and Oceans is investigating after someone removed teeth from a dead killer whale on Vancouver Island.

    DFO Investigating After Teeth Removed From Dead Orca On Vancouver Island