Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Parents plead guilty in 2021 death of burned, emaciated toddler in Calgary

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2024 03:05 PM
  • Parents plead guilty in 2021 death of burned, emaciated toddler in Calgary

The parents of a badly burned and emaciated Calgary toddler have pleaded guilty in his death.

Court heard on Monday horrific details about the 2021 death of Gabriel Sinclair-Pasqua.

The 18-month-old boy suffered major burns to a third of his body. An agreed statement of facts says his parents didn’t seek medical treatment and tried to treat the burns with honey.

He died from the infected burn and head trauma, said the document.

Sonya Pasqua, 34, and Michael Sinclair, 32, pleaded guilty to manslaughter a month before their scheduled trial. They are to be sentenced at a later date.

Crown prosecutor Carolina Valenzuela read the agreed facts in court detailing the child’s final days.

She said Gabriel was taken by Child and Family Services as a newborn, after his mother tested positive for cocaine, alcohol and marijuana, and was placed in the care of an uncle.

The boy was returned to his biological parents six months before he died.

Paramedics were called to the family's home on Oct. 5, 2021.

"First responders arrived and found Gabriel in the master bedroom and described him as being already visibly deceased," said the document.

"His extremities were cool, almost cold to the touch, upon unzipping his onesie his body was still somewhat warm to the touch. His skin was an ashen grey colour."

Paramedics also described the child's low body weight and various injuries.

A pediatric surgeon said the burn would have required emergency medical care and immediate hospitalization.

"Gabriel's untreated major burn triggered widespread bacterial infection, or sepsis, in his last week of life," said the court document.

It said text messages between the parents a week earlier discussed his injuries.

"We need him to heal then we can send him off to a facility ’cause we still need him as a paycheque,” Sinclair said in a text. 

Court heard the couple told officials different versions of how the boy was injured, including that he fell and hit his head on a toilet and that he pulled a pot of boiling water off a stove.

“Pasqua and Sinclair admit that the harm suffered by Gabriel, both the burns and blunt force trauma, were significant. The burns would have been readily apparent and visible to both accused as Gabriel continued for days to suffer without treatment," Valenzuela added.

Justice Glen Poelman ordered Gladue reports be prepared into the offenders’ Indigenous backgrounds before sentencing arguments are made in the New Year. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Union says it will challenge Ottawa's intervention in B.C. port work stoppages

Union says it will challenge Ottawa's intervention in B.C. port work stoppages
The union representing locked-out port workers in British Columbia says it plans to challenge the federal government's intervention in the ongoing labour dispute. The International Longshore and Warehouse Union Ship & Dock Foremen Local 514 called the government's move an insult to the union and to workers' bargaining rights. 

Union says it will challenge Ottawa's intervention in B.C. port work stoppages

B.C. teen with bird flu is in critical care, infection source unknown: health officer

B.C. teen with bird flu is in critical care, infection source unknown: health officer
The teenager who tested positive for bird flu in British Columbia is in critical condition and being treated at B.C. Children's Hospital, the provincial health officer says. Dr. Bonnie Henry said Tuesday contact tracing being conducted has not identified anyone else linked to the case of the teen who has fallen ill.

B.C. teen with bird flu is in critical care, infection source unknown: health officer

Drugs disguised as dog treats seized by Metro Vancouver Transit Police

Drugs disguised as dog treats seized by Metro Vancouver Transit Police
Two people have been charged after a Metro Vancouver Transit Police investigation turned up guns and illicit drugs, including fentanyl disguised as dog treats. Police say they began investigating an alleged drug trafficking operation based in Surrey, B.C., last spring, leading to the arrest of a man and a woman from the area.

Drugs disguised as dog treats seized by Metro Vancouver Transit Police

Skateboarder hurt in hit and run

Skateboarder hurt in hit and run
Police on Vancouver Island are appealing for witnesses after a 60-year-old skateboarder was hurt in a hit-and-run on Remembrance Day. Mounties say it happened along Comox Road near Scott Road, outside Courtenay.

Skateboarder hurt in hit and run

Former B.C. premier John Horgan passes away at 65

Former B.C. premier John Horgan passes away at 65
Ambassador to Germany and former British Columbia premier John Horgan has died at the age of 65, after his third bout with cancer. Horgan served as B.C.'s New Democrat premier for five years before stepping down in 2022, then was appointed ambassador last year.

Former B.C. premier John Horgan passes away at 65

'Do the work': Ottawa urges both sides in B.C. port dispute to restart talks

'Do the work': Ottawa urges both sides in B.C. port dispute to restart talks
Ottawa has urged both sides in the labour dispute at B-C ports to return to the table after the latest mediated talks collapsed over the weekend. A statement from federal Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon says both the employers and the union representing more than 700 longshore supervisors "must understand the urgency of the situation" as a lockout enters its second week.

'Do the work': Ottawa urges both sides in B.C. port dispute to restart talks