Close X
Monday, December 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Woman who killed her sons apologizes in B.C. Supreme Court

The Canadian Press , 12 Sep, 2014 08:11 PM

    VANCOUVER - A Vancouver woman convicted of killing her two infant sons issued a statement of remorse and regret in B.C. Supreme Court, saying every time she sees people with their children she thinks of what her family may have been like.

    Sarah Leung was convicted in April of two counts of infanticide for the separate deaths of her boys in April 2009 and March 2010.

    Leung's father found the first infant dead in a plastic bag outside the family home and called police. DNA testing later showed the baby belonged to Leung and her partner. The body of the second baby was never found.

    "Every time I drive by the funeral home where my first baby was cremated, I always think about him," said Leung at the end of her sentencing hearing.

    She apologized for the pain and hurt she caused those around her.

    "I know it's going to be hard for people to ever trust me again," she said. "Every time I see people with their children I think that could be me with my kids."

    Earlier this week, the Crown prosecutor called for an eight-year prison sentence. On Friday, Leung's lawyer asked that she be sentenced for three years in prison, one year for the first count of infanticide and two years for the second.

    Defence lawyer Richard Fowler said Leung should be given a lighter sentence because she was psychologically disturbed and overly dependent on her family.

    Fowler told the court that Leung, who would have been between 23 and 24 years old at the time of the infant's deaths, didn't have the maturity expected of people her age.

    "In terms of her personality, younger and more emotionally and psychologically underdeveloped than her chronological age," said Fowler. "A measure of dependency on others, particularly her parents, belied her true chronological age."

    Fowler also recommended Leung be required to report any future pregnancies to child welfare authorities.

    Her trial heard the babies were both delivered into the toilet of her family home and tossed in the garbage in plastic bags. Her lawyer told the court Leung concealed her pregnancies and secretly disposed of her infants' bodies because she was terrified of being disowned by her family.

    Fowler told Leung's sentencing hearing that her sons died because she failed to provide proper care for them.

    "There is no positive act in my respectful submission coupled with any intent to cause harm," he said. "Their deaths resulted from omissions on the part of Ms. Leung, omissions being failing to provide the necessary support for their care."

    But Crown prosecutor Sandra Cunningham countered that the deaths resulted from "violent acts."

    "Flushing the toilet while the baby was in it is a violent act," Cunningham said.

    "The cause of death of baby boy number 1 is consistent with suffocation," she said. "The baby was breathing and crying a little."

    The defence has said there was no certainty either baby was alive when Leung put them in plastic bags.

    The court heard Leung and her boyfriend were seeing each other secretly, and she became pregnant in 2008. The man believed she was happy about the pregnancies and did not realize she was afraid of her family.

    Leung delivered her first child in her family home, cleaned up the blood and hid the evidence. She told her boyfriend she had miscarried.

    She became pregnant again and the pattern repeated itself.

    Justice Mary Humphries will release her decision on a sentence on Oct. 7.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police
    TORONTO — Four people have been arrested in a shooting in northwest Toronto that sent five people to hospital, one with life-threatening injuries, police said Thursday.

    Four Arrested After Five People Shot In Toronto: Police

    Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds

    Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds
    TORONTO - A new study shows prescriptions for high-dose formulations of opioids like oxycodone and morphine jumped by 23 per cent in Canada between 2006 and 2011, despite guidelines advising doctors against giving most patients such elevated doses.

    Prescriptions for high-dose opioids on rise in Canada, study finds

    Key points of Rob Ford's political career

    Key points of Rob Ford's political career
    TORONTO - Rob Ford has ended his campaign for re-election as Toronto mayor and will instead seek a city council seat. Here are some of the key points of his political career:

    Key points of Rob Ford's political career

    Canada ratifies investment deal with China despite misgivings

    Canada ratifies investment deal with China despite misgivings
    OTTAWA - Canada has ratified the contentious Foreign Investment Protection Agreement with China.

    Canada ratifies investment deal with China despite misgivings

    I Didn't Look Great: Court Hears Cop Say After He Allegedly Watched Jail Sex

    I Didn't Look Great: Court Hears Cop Say After He Allegedly Watched Jail Sex
      KAMLOOPS, B.C. - A senior RCMP officer facing a breach of trust charge after allegedly watching two female inmates have sex in a jail cell admitted he should have intervened, a court in Kamloops, B.C., has heard.

    I Didn't Look Great: Court Hears Cop Say After He Allegedly Watched Jail Sex

    Iconic Hollow Tree Landmark In Stanley Park Set Ablaze Twice Overnight

    Iconic Hollow Tree Landmark In Stanley Park Set Ablaze Twice Overnight
    VANCOUVER - Police are investigating after an iconic landmark in Vancouver's Stanley Park was set on fire twice in one night.

    Iconic Hollow Tree Landmark In Stanley Park Set Ablaze Twice Overnight

    PrevNext