Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pastor Tells Toronto Murder Trial Of Confession That Led To Break In Case

The Canadian Press, 10 May, 2016 11:48 AM
    TORONTO — An Ontario pastor is telling the trial of a woman accused in the death of her stepdaughter about a confession that led to a break in a homicide case that lay unsolved for years.
     
    Rev. Eduardo Cruz says Elaine Biddersingh came to him in November 2011 and told him about the death of her stepdaughter, Melonie.
     
    He says Biddersingh told him about how Melonie came from Jamaica to live in the family home in Toronto.
     
    Cruz says Biddersingh told him Melonie was confined, denied food, water and medical attention before she died.
     
    Biddersingh has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of 17-year-old Melonie, whose body was found in a burning suitcase in an industrial parking lot north of Toronto in 1994.
     
    Melonie's identity remained a mystery until 2011, when Cruz went to police after his conversation with Biddersingh.
     
    "I said 'what you're telling me is very serious and I need to know if it's the truth,'" Cruz recalled for the court. "She said 'pastor, it's 100 per cent true.'"
     
    A DNA test confirmed Melonie's identity in 2012, and Biddersingh and her husband were arrested, court heard.
     
    The trial has heard from a Crown prosecutor that Biddersingh was the "mastermind" behind horrific physical and emotional abuse suffered by Melonie, while her husband was the enforcer.
     
    The jury has heard that Melonie and two brothers came to Toronto from Jamaica to live with their father and stepmother.
     
    The children were not sent to school and over time, were treated like slaves, the court has heard.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Drones Reportedly Spotted Near Two Large B.C. Wildfires

    Drones Reportedly Spotted Near Two Large B.C. Wildfires
    Fire information officer Amanda Reynolds said the BC Wildfire Service received two reports of unmanned aerial vehicles near wildfires on Friday.

    Drones Reportedly Spotted Near Two Large B.C. Wildfires

    First Of Two Pregnant Walruses Gives Birth At Quebec City Aquarium

    First Of Two Pregnant Walruses Gives Birth At Quebec City Aquarium
    The aquarium says it's the first time in Canada a captive walrus has delivered a live full-term baby.

    First Of Two Pregnant Walruses Gives Birth At Quebec City Aquarium

    Newfoundland And Labrador Mulls $32,000 Pay Hike For Judges Amid Fiscal Crunch

    Newfoundland And Labrador Mulls $32,000 Pay Hike For Judges Amid Fiscal Crunch
    An independent tribunal has recommended increases totalling 14 per cent from 2013-14 to 2016-17, including accumulated retroactive pay of almost $1 million, a Justice spokesman confirms.

    Newfoundland And Labrador Mulls $32,000 Pay Hike For Judges Amid Fiscal Crunch

    P.E.I. Confederation Museum To Shut Down Permanently Due To Lack Of Interest

    P.E.I. Confederation Museum To Shut Down Permanently Due To Lack Of Interest
    Founders Hall in downtown Charlottetown opened in 2001 and explained Canada's inception, beginning with the Charlottetown Conference in 1864.

    P.E.I. Confederation Museum To Shut Down Permanently Due To Lack Of Interest

    Fort McMurray Evacuees Look For Normalcy On Mother's Day, Despite Fire

    Fort McMurray Evacuees Look For Normalcy On Mother's Day, Despite Fire
    While planning their Mother's Day celebrations, evacuees who fled the wildfire ravaging Fort McMurray, Alta., are looking for normalcy.

    Fort McMurray Evacuees Look For Normalcy On Mother's Day, Despite Fire

    Site C Protesters To Dismantle Camp Outside Vancouver BC Hydro Office

    Opponents of a major hydroelectric dam project in northern British Columbia are packing up a protest camp outside BC Hydro's Vancouver office.

    Site C Protesters To Dismantle Camp Outside Vancouver BC Hydro Office