Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Winnipeg Woman Accused In Infant Remains Case Had At Least 10 Legal Abortions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Apr, 2016 11:59 AM
    WINNIPEG — The lawyer for a Winnipeg woman accused of hiding the remains of six dead infants in a storage locker says she had least ten legal abortions.
     
    Defence lawyer Greg Brodsky told court Andrea Giesbrecht had the abortions over a 17-year period from 1994 to 2011.
     
    He says she had two in 2009.
     
    Giesbrecht, who is 42, is charged with concealment after infant remains were found inside a storage locker she was renting in October 2014.
     
     
    No one has been able to say how long the remains may have been there or how they got there and it's unclear how the information about the abortions relates to the remains.
     
    Prosecutors filed medical records for Giesbrecht as evidence and also filed medical records that say Giesbrecht’s husband had a vasectomy in 2011.
     
    A DNA expert is expected to testify this afternoon.
     
    A police officer told court on Tuesday that the locker contained two plastic tote containers and three pails, each containing human remains in different stages of decomposition.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    N.S. Politician Steve Sampson Says He’s Being Blackmailed Over Male Escort Call

    N.S. Politician Steve Sampson Says He’s Being Blackmailed Over Male Escort Call
    Steve Sampson, a member of Richmond County council, said he received an unmarked envelope in the mail Tuesday at his home containing a photocopy of a hotel bill from February, 2014, incurred while on county business in Seattle, Wash.

    N.S. Politician Steve Sampson Says He’s Being Blackmailed Over Male Escort Call

    TransCanada Working On Repairing S.D. Segment Of Keystone Pipeline That Leaked

    CALGARY — TransCanada engineers and the U.S. pipeline regulator are working out the best way to fix a segment of the Keystone system that spilled oil in South Dakota.

    TransCanada Working On Repairing S.D. Segment Of Keystone Pipeline That Leaked

    Experts Warn That Self-driving Cars Not Ready For US Roads

    Experts Warn That Self-driving Cars Not Ready For US Roads
    WASHINGTON — Engineers and safety advocates are telling the U.S. government that self-driving cars are more likely to be a threat than a benefit to public safety because of unresolved technical issues.

    Experts Warn That Self-driving Cars Not Ready For US Roads

    Investigation Launched After Greyhound Strands Girls In B.C.'s Remote Interior

    Investigation Launched After Greyhound Strands Girls In B.C.'s Remote Interior
    Greyhound spokeswoman said in an email the bus company is treating the matter very seriously and that customer safety is the business's cornerstone.

    Investigation Launched After Greyhound Strands Girls In B.C.'s Remote Interior

    B.C. Conflict Commissioner Launches Review Of Exclusive Political Events

    B.C. Conflict Commissioner Launches Review Of Exclusive Political Events
    Paul Fraser said in a letter that he plans to issue one opinion after reviewing the complaints about the practice of B.C. politicians participating in fundraising events.

    B.C. Conflict Commissioner Launches Review Of Exclusive Political Events

    Federal Environment Minister Preaches Patience, Unity On Climate Policy

    Federal Environment Minister Preaches Patience, Unity On Climate Policy
     For the second time in a week, the federal environment minister has suggested the Liberal government is prepared to tap the brakes on its aggressive climate change agenda in the interests of national unity.

    Federal Environment Minister Preaches Patience, Unity On Climate Policy