Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

'They Knew He Was Dying' Parents Guilty Of 1st-Degree Murder In Son's Death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2017 03:26 PM
    CALGARY — The painful death of a diabetic boy who was so emaciated he appeared mummified could have been avoided if his parents had not isolated and neglected him for years, a judge said Friday in finding the couple guilty of first-degree murder.
     
    Justice Karen Horner said Emil Radita, 60, and Rodica Radita, 54, were equally guilty of murdering 15-year-old Alexandru.
     
    The boy, who was one of the Raditas' eight children, weighed less than 37 pounds when he died in 2013 of complications due to untreated diabetes and starvation.
     
    "Mr. and Mrs. Radita intended to and did isolate Alex from anyone who could intervene or monitor his insulin treatment aside from themselves," said Horner.
     
    "Alex died as a result of bacterial sepsis brought on by extreme starvation. His physical condition at death was not a sudden or quick occurrence but rather took place over months and possibly, probably years."
     
    Horner said by isolating Alex he was unlawfully confined and totally reliant on his parents. She said it was also clear that the Raditas knew what they were doing in denying him a sufficient amount of insulin and the long-term consequences.
     
    "The evidence underscores that the Raditas were well aware how ill Alex was and still refused to treat his medical condition with proper insulin protocol and medical care," she said.
     
    "They knew he was dying."
     
    Neither parent showed any emotion or had a comment during sentencing.
     
    Justice Horner sentenced them to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.
     
     
    "Your actions in starving your son Alex to death are beyond comprehension. You persisted in arrogant confidence...until he was dead."
     
    Witnesses testified that the Raditas refused to accept that their son had diabetes and failed to treat his disease until he was hospitalized near death in British Columbia in 2003.
     
    B.C. social workers apprehended Alexandru after his October 2003 hospital admission and placed him in foster care — where he thrived — for nearly a year before he was returned to his family, who eventually moved to Alberta.
     
    Patricia MacDonald, the B.C. social worker who fought against Alex being returned to his parents, was in court for the verdict.
     
    'I'm happy with the verdict. I think that it really is justice for Alex. He went through a horrible ending to his life and I'm glad to see his parents being held accountable," said MacDonald.
     
    She said she wanted to see the Raditas one final time.
     
    "I just feel like they're so empty. They're void of any kind of emotion, any kind of feeling. I've never met parents like them in my life."
     
    Testimony also indicated that after the family moved to Alberta, he was enrolled in an online school program for one year, but never finished. There was no evidence that the boy ever saw a doctor, although he did have an Alberta health insurance number.
     
    The trial heard that the parents’ religious beliefs included not going to doctors.
     
    The day the Alexandru died, the family went to church and said that the boy had died, but that God had resurrected him.
     
    "This was a really difficult case for all involved. The facts that Justice Horner found were such that you really did see the magnitude of Alex's suffering, how long it was and how extensive it was," said Crown prosecutor Susan Pepper.
     
    "Certainly the evidence that was presented in court does show that the system and the social safety net in our province and in our country did fail Alex."
     
    Pepper said she hopes that Alex's case eventually leads to changes in how children in care are tracked in the future.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A jury has acquitted a Newfoundland police officer of sexually assaulting an intoxicated woman he drove home from a bar while on duty.

    Newfoundland Police Officer Acquitted In Contentious Sexual Assault Case

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.
    Mounties say the victim, a 55-year-old Surrey resident, was sleeping when the blaze began.

    Man Dead After Campervan Goes Up In Flames In Surrey, B.C.

    Teacher At School In Southern Alberta Charged With Child Sex Exploitation

    Teacher At School In Southern Alberta Charged With Child Sex Exploitation
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — A teacher from a school in southern Alberta is facing child exploitation charges.

    Teacher At School In Southern Alberta Charged With Child Sex Exploitation

    Man Claims GPS Led Him Into Toronto Transit Tunnel Where Car Got Stuck: TTC

    Man Claims GPS Led Him Into Toronto Transit Tunnel Where Car Got Stuck: TTC
    A man who allegedly drove his SUV into a streetcar tunnel on Thursday, bringing traffic in downtown Toronto to a halt for several hours, reportedly told transit officials he was following his GPS instructions when his vehicle got stuck.

    Man Claims GPS Led Him Into Toronto Transit Tunnel Where Car Got Stuck: TTC

    Getting A Coffee Led To Arrest Of Woman Accused Of Making Hoax 911 Call: Police

      A 36-year-old woman is charged with public mischief.

    Getting A Coffee Led To Arrest Of Woman Accused Of Making Hoax 911 Call: Police

    Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside

    Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — The RCMP are thanking a Canada Post employee in British Columbia for helping solve a case involving a nude toddler who had gone missing.

    Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside

    PrevNext