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Alberta Court of Appeal orders new trial for mom accused of strangling daughter

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jan, 2015 11:29 AM

    CALGARY — A mother accused of strangling her teenage daughter is to face a new trial.

    The Alberta Court of Appeal has overturned an October 2013 ruling that found that Aset Magomadova (uh-SET' mag-uh-muh-DOH'-vuh), was too ill from cancer to face another second-degree murder trial.

    Two of three Appeal Court judges wrote that while her medical condition evokes sympathy, the judge failed to explicitly address the community’s interest in seeing a murder charge proceed to trial.

    Magomadova was charged with second-degree murder in 2007 after her 14-year-old daughter, Aminat, was choked to death with a scarf.

    The mother was convicted of manslaughter in 2009 and given a suspended sentence with three years probation, which the Crown successfully appealed.

    When the second trial was to begin, Magomadova applied for a stay, which she ultimately obtained on the grounds that her illness precluded her from receiving a fair trial.

    In 2013, Magomadova's oncologist told court her prognosis was dismal and the woman's chance of surviving another five years was "less than one per cent."

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