Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Verdict Expected In Calgary Murder Trial Of Parents In Diabetic Son's Death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2017 12:42 PM
    CALGARY — A judge is expected to rule today whether the parents of a diabetic boy who died of starvation and lack of treatment are guilty of first-degree murder.
     
    Emil and Rodica Radita have pleaded not guilty in 15-year-old Alexandru’s death.
     
    Alexandru, who was one of eight children, weighed less than 37 pounds when he died in 2013 of complications due to untreated diabetes and starvation.
     
    Alberta's chief medical examiner testified an autopsy showed the teen was severely underweight, covered in ulcers and nearly toothless, and there were several signs the boy had been subjected to neglect and starvation.
     
    Dr. Jeffery Gofton said Alexandru appeared skeletal with thin hair and sunken eyes. He said the boy was wearing a diaper and had very little body fat.
     
    He told court the teen's teeth were in an extreme state of disrepair and it appeared most had rotted down to the root. There was no sign of any dental work.
     
    Defence lawyer Andrea Serink, who represents Rodica Radita, said the couple didn't intend to kill their son, but are culpable for not providing the level of care that he needed.
     
    "The Raditas are guilty of manslaughter, not murder," she said in her final argument.
     
    Crown prosecutor Susan Pepper said any reasonable person would have known lack of treatment would have fatal consequences for Alexandru.
     
    “Really the question is was there an intention to withhold care … leading to certain consequences that they would expect to have occur?” Pepper said in her final remarks.
     
    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.
     
    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.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Government Approves Three Supervised Injection Sites In Montreal

    Canada currently has two drug injection sites in Canada — both in Vancouver — and existing laws allow such sites to operate only in exceptional circumstances.

    Federal Government Approves Three Supervised Injection Sites In Montreal

    Vancouver Police Appeal For Public’s Help To Solve Homicide

    Vancouver Police Appeal For Public’s Help To Solve Homicide
    The VPD’s Major Crime Section is appealing for the public’s help to solve the Wednesday night homicide in Stanley Park.

    Vancouver Police Appeal For Public’s Help To Solve Homicide

    Health Ministry Gives Nod For Patient Care Tower In Kamloops, B.C.

    Health Ministry Gives Nod For Patient Care Tower In Kamloops, B.C.
    Health Minister Terry Lake says the government expects work on the $417-million project to begin in 2018

    Health Ministry Gives Nod For Patient Care Tower In Kamloops, B.C.

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart
    An imam who spoke at the funerals for three Quebec mosque shooting victims says he believes his words have become popular on social media because his message came from the heart.

    Imam Hassan Guillet Says Speech That Was Re-tweeted By J.K. Rowling Came From His Heart

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case
    Hamed Shafia and his parents were found guilty in January 2012 of four counts of first-degree murder — killings their trial judge described as being motivated by their "twisted concept of honour."

    Shafia Brother Convicted Of Killing 4 Women Asks Top Court To Hear His Case

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker
    A judge is to give his decision today in the case of a woman charged with disposing of the remains of six infants in a Winnipeg storage locker.

    Judge To Give Verdict For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Dead Babies In Locker