Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
India

Trial Date Delayed By B.C. Judge For Man In 'Surrey Six' Slayings

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2016 03:37 PM
    VANCOUVER — The trial of a man accused of one count of first-degree murder in an attack that left six people dead has been delayed, pushing it back more than a decade from when the slayings happened in Surrey, B.C. 
     
    Justice Kathleen Ker of the B.C. Supreme Court says it's "completely unrealistic" for the trial of Jamie Bacon to begin on Oct. 31 as scheduled, given the considerable pre-trial work that remains to be done.
     
    Bacon, a reputed member of the Red Scorpions gang, has been charged with conspiracy and first-degree murder for his alleged role in the October 2007 slayings, an event that became known as the Surrey Six murders.
     
    His trial is now scheduled to begin on March 5, 2018, with jury selection taking place one month before that date.
     
     
    The charges stem from a massacre in a 15th-storey apartment in nearby Surrey.
     
    Bacon's trial has already been delayed several times since his arrest in 2009, and court proceedings have taken place behind closed doors in Vancouver for months.
     
    Dan McLaughlin, a spokesman for the province's Criminal Justice Branch, says the trial is expected to take between six and nine months.
     
    Red Scorpion gang members Cody Haevischer and Matthew Johnston were each given life sentences in December 2014 for conspiracy and six counts of first-degree murder in the slayings. Both men filed appeals of the verdicts in January 2015.
     
     
    The Crown's theory at their trial was that the gang's bosses ordered the men to murder Corey Lal, a rival drug trafficker, and the other five were killed to eliminate witnesses.
     
    Another man pleaded guilty to break and enter with intent to commit an indictable offence for his part in the slayings. He was originally charged with manslaughter in addition to the break-and-enter charge
     
    Eileen Mohan, whose son Christopher was an innocent bystander killed in the attack, was in court for Friday's proceedings.
     
    Afterwards, she described the years-long wait as difficult to handle.
     
     
    "I appreciate the delay, and I know that the delay is to put systems and procedures in place and get this trial running in the right manner, but it takes a toll," she said outside court.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Mehbooba Pins Kashmir Hopes On Modi, Blames Pakistan For Unrest

    Mehbooba Pins Kashmir Hopes On Modi, Blames Pakistan For Unrest
    Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti on Saturday squarely blamed Pakistan and separatists for fuelling the ongoing trouble in the Kashmir Valley that has been seething with public anger and violent anti-government protests for the past 50 days.

    Mehbooba Pins Kashmir Hopes On Modi, Blames Pakistan For Unrest

    Akali Dal 'Shocked' By Arvind Kejriwal's 'Anti-Sikh' Stand

    Akali Dal 'Shocked' By Arvind Kejriwal's 'Anti-Sikh' Stand
    Describing Kejriwal's remarks, made to Chhotepur, as "shocking in the extreme", the Akali Dal termed these as "anti-Sikh, most disparaging and humiliating remarks".

    Akali Dal 'Shocked' By Arvind Kejriwal's 'Anti-Sikh' Stand

    Three B.C. Cities Want Ottawa To Share Revenue Of Prospective Marijuana Tax

    VANCOUVER — Three municipalities in British Columbia want a stake in any tax revenue that the federal government collects from the legalization of marijuana.

    Three B.C. Cities Want Ottawa To Share Revenue Of Prospective Marijuana Tax

    Rahul Gandhi Must Quit Politics To Save Congress Future: Subramanian Swamy

    Rahul Gandhi Must Quit Politics To Save Congress Future: Subramanian Swamy
    On Thursday, Gandhi said in a tweet, “I will never stop fighting the hateful and divisive agenda of the RSS. I stand by every single word I said.”

    Rahul Gandhi Must Quit Politics To Save Congress Future: Subramanian Swamy

    Chilli Pepper Balls May Replace Pellets In Kashmir

    A government-appointed experts panel has recommended chilli pepper-filled balls to replace the dangerous pellets as less lethal ammunition to control protesting crowds in Jammu and Kashmir.

    Chilli Pepper Balls May Replace Pellets In Kashmir

    Asked To Remove Pagdi, Bjp Mp Virendra Singh 'Mast' Refuses US Visa

    Asked To Remove Pagdi, Bjp Mp  Virendra Singh 'Mast' Refuses US Visa
    Upset at being asked to remove his pagdi, Mast, a Rajput from Uttar Pradesh, refused to visit the US and returned to his constituency Bhadohi. 

    Asked To Remove Pagdi, Bjp Mp Virendra Singh 'Mast' Refuses US Visa