Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Python Owner Not Cavalier Or Reckless, Defence Lawyer Says In Closing Argument

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Nov, 2016 12:33 PM
    FREDERICTON — Jean-Claude Savoie didn't cover a ventilation pipe above his python's enclosure not because he was careless or reckless, but because he simply didn't believe the large snake could possibly fit through it, his lawyer told a New Brunswick jury in closing arguments Tuesday.
     
    The python travelled through a ventilation duct and dropped into the living room where the boys slept. Savoie's own son, sleeping in another room, was unharmed.
     
    A number of witnesses have said it was common to see the cover of the vent on the enclosure's floor.
     
    Defence lawyer Leslie Matchim said Tuesday the snake did try to escape about a month or so before the boys were killed, but got stuck partway through the pipe, convincing Savoie and others that it could not escape that way.
     
    "They were wrong, but not from a lack of caring," he said.
     
    Matchim said Savoie didn't go out and buy the snake. The Canadian Wildlife Service asked him to take it after the snake was seized in Saint John, and Savoie was never given any money to care for the snake in the subsequent 11 years. 
     
    Matchim says Savoie lived in the apartment with his three-year-old son.
     
    "Would he put his own safety and that of his son at risk?" Matchim asked.
     
    The boys had spent Aug. 4, 2013, petting animals and playing at a farm owned by Savoie's father before a sleepover in Savoie's apartment.
     
    Matchim said the trip to the farm with the children showed Savoie was a good father and guardian and was not cavalier with their safety.
     
    Matchim said the issue here is foreseeability.
     
    "Does omission constitute criminal negligence?" he said.
     
    He said Savoie didn't cover the ventilation pipe because he didn't think there was any chance the snake could exit through the ventilation pipe.
     
    "There is no need to install a barrier if you've come to that conclusion in your mind," he said.
     
    Matchim said there's no proof Savoie was being reckless.
     
    "Accidents happen, but not everyone who causes an accident is guilty of criminal negligence causing death," he said.  
     
    He says if the jury finds reasonable doubt, they must find Savoie not guilty.
     
    Earlier in the day, a snake expert from Florida testified it would have been "common sense" to cover the ventilation pipe after an escape attempt.
     
    Eugene Bessette was the only witness for the defence.
     
    During cross-examination by Crown prosecutor Pierre Roussel, Bessette told the court he was impressed by photos of the snake's enclosure in Savoie's apartment, calling the locked door "very sufficient" security.
     
    Roussel referred to earlier testimony about the snake's escape attempt through a ventilation pipe above the enclosure, and asked what Bessette would have done if there was such an escape attempt at his snake farm.
     
    "I would have made an attempt to rectify the situation," Bessette said.
     
    "You would have covered the opening?" Roussel asked. "You would cover the hole for the safety of the animal and the public?"
     
    "That would be common sense," Bessette said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    VPD Release Video Of Man Assaulting Two Women In East Vancouver

    VPD Release Video Of Man Assaulting Two Women In East Vancouver
    Vancouver Police are releasing video of a man who assaulted two women in April.

    VPD Release Video Of Man Assaulting Two Women In East Vancouver

    Can You Help Coroner Identify Man Found Dead 20 Years Ago In West Vancouver?

    VANCOUVER — The BC Coroners Service is asking for the public's help in identifying a man who was found dead in West Vancouver more than 20 years ago.

    Can You Help Coroner Identify Man Found Dead 20 Years Ago In West Vancouver?

    Disappearance Of Playground Fund Shocks Parents, Students, At Surrey School

    Disappearance Of Playground Fund Shocks Parents, Students, At Surrey School
    SURREY, B.C. — More than two years of fundraising for a new playground at a Surrey, B.C., elementary school appears to have been wiped out.

    Disappearance Of Playground Fund Shocks Parents, Students, At Surrey School

    Premier Says B.C. To Spend Additional $10 Million In Battle Against Overdoses

    Premier Says B.C. To Spend Additional $10 Million In Battle Against Overdoses
      "We must stem this epidemic on our streets," Christy Clark said Wednesday. "We must protect our children."

    Premier Says B.C. To Spend Additional $10 Million In Battle Against Overdoses

    Prince William, Kate To Visit Military Families At Children's Party

    Prince William, Kate To Visit Military Families At Children's Party
    VICTORIA — The royals are back in their home base of Victoria as they near the end of a week-long visit and will meet with local families at a children's party today.

    Prince William, Kate To Visit Military Families At Children's Party

    Teacher Who Lost Sight After School Shooting Says She's Getting Little Help

    Teacher Who Lost Sight After School Shooting Says She's Getting Little Help
    SASKATOON — Charlene Klyne lost her sight after a deadly school shooting in northern Saskatchewan and still has shotgun pellets lodged in her jaw and chest.

    Teacher Who Lost Sight After School Shooting Says She's Getting Little Help