Close X
Thursday, December 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Man's Murder Conviction Thrown Out For Second Time By N.S. Appeal Court

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Oct, 2016 12:31 PM
  • Ottawa Man's Murder Conviction Thrown Out For Second Time By N.S. Appeal Court
HALIFAX — The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal has thrown out — for a second time — the first-degree murder conviction of an Ottawa man who claimed he had no idea a drug-world associate was planning to shoot someone in the head.
 
It was a Hells Angels-ordered killing: The dead man, Sean Simmons, had been targeted in October 2000 because he'd had an affair with a girlfriend of a member of the outlaw gang.
 
Steven Gareau was one of four men convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder.
 
The appeal court ruled Wednesday, though, that the judge presiding over Gareau's trial mistakenly allowed the jury to hear about a second, earlier shooting, and mishandled wiretap evidence suggesting Gareau wasn't aware of a murder plot.
 
"In my respectful view, the judge erred in law," said Justice Joel Fichaud.
 
Gareau has been ordered to face a third trial — although the court ruling pointedly noted a retrial is "at the Crown's discretion."
 
Gareau was first convicted in 2004, but it was thrown out eight years later because of different legal mistakes by a different judge.
 
He was retried over seven months in 2013 and 2014. The Crown's key witness said Gareau was not the shooter, but was aware that the gunman, Dean Kelsie, planned to kill Simmons over Simmons' 1994 affair with the girlfriend of Hells Angel Mike MacRae.
 
The appeal court ruling said Simmons had fled Nova Scotia for New Brunswick after being severely beaten twice, but "four years later he made the mistake of returning to Nova Scotia."
 
In 2000, Gareau and two friends, Paul Derry and Tina Potts, themselves moved to Nova Scotia from Ontario, making a living through bank card fraud and selling drugs. Simmons had hoped to sell quaaludes for Derry.
 
Gareau got his drugs from Derry and another man, Wayne James, who were supplied by Neil Smith of the Hells Angels. When Smith heard about Simmons being back in Halifax, he told James and Derry he'd knock $25,000 off the $85,000 cocaine debt they owed him if they killed him.
 
"Smith was perturbed by Simmons' earlier relationship with a club-member's girlfriend. So Smith ordered James to have Simmons 'whacked',” the appeal court recounts in its decision. "James then turned to Derry, who ... said 'You heard him.' In return, Smith would waive $25,000 of the Derry/James debt for fronted cocaine."
 
Gareau went along as Kelsie, an associate of the crew, met Simmons in the lobby of a Dartmouth apartment building. Kelsie pulled out a gun and shot Simmons in the head, which Gareau's lawyers said came as a shock to their client.
 
The jury convicted Gareau again in February 2014.
 
On Wednesday, the appeal court said the trial judge made two legal errors, including allowing Derry to testify about an earlier shooting involving Gareau and the rest of the crew: "The message to the jury was: Gareau had the disposition to knowingly participate in a shooting with these same co-conspirators."
 
The appeal court also said the trial judge was also wrong to disallow cross-examination of Derry on a wiretaped conversation he had with Gareau, in which Derry seemingly agreed that Gareau "wasn't aware" of the murder plot.
 
"This reasonably might have altered the outcome" of Gareau's trial, the appeal court said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Back To School Spending Is 'Economy Insensitive' And Set To Grow, Experts Say

Back To School Spending Is 'Economy Insensitive' And Set To Grow, Experts Say
Retail experts are forecasting an increase in Canadian back-to-school spending this summer thanks in part to the low loonie and the new Canada Child Benefit. 

Back To School Spending Is 'Economy Insensitive' And Set To Grow, Experts Say

My Mom Is Funnier Than Me And The Strongest Person I Know: YouTube Star Lilly Singh

My Mom Is Funnier Than Me And The Strongest Person I Know: YouTube Star Lilly Singh
This year alone, she's made Forbes' "30 Under 30 Hollywood & Entertainment" list; had cameos in "Bad Moms" and "Ice Age: Collision Course"; announced a book deal

My Mom Is Funnier Than Me And The Strongest Person I Know: YouTube Star Lilly Singh

Charges In 'Sexting' Ring A Quandary For Nova Scotia Town — And For Experts

When 14-year-old Jillian speaks of her generation's widespread practice of sending naked selfies to others, she describes both its inherent dangers — and what for some is an irresistible allure.

Charges In 'Sexting' Ring A Quandary For Nova Scotia Town — And For Experts

Government To Rebuild Immigration Detention Facilities In Vancouver, Laval, Que.

Government To Rebuild Immigration Detention Facilities In Vancouver, Laval, Que.
OTTAWA — Immigration holding facilities in Vancouver and Laval, Que., will be replaced as part of a $138-million overhaul intended to improve detention conditions for newcomers to Canada.

Government To Rebuild Immigration Detention Facilities In Vancouver, Laval, Que.

Canada Need Not Import Australia's Woes With Ranked Ballot Voting System

Australia's deadlocked election last winter has been held up as a grim example of the chaos that could be unleashed in Canada were this country to adopt a system of ranked ballots — as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at one time openly preferred.

Canada Need Not Import Australia's Woes With Ranked Ballot Voting System

'Home Sales Volume Down 1.3% In July'

'Home Sales Volume Down 1.3% In July'
More than half of all markets tracked by CREA showed declines in July, including Greater Vancouver and the Fraser Valley.

'Home Sales Volume Down 1.3% In July'