Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Bail Denied After Charges Re-activated In Alberta Missing Couple Case

The Canadian Press, 21 Dec, 2014 05:44 PM
    EDMONTON – Police say bail has been denied to Travis Vader after charges of first-degree murder he faced in the deaths of an Edmonton couple were re-activated.
     
    RCMP say Vader was brought to court on Saturday to determine whether bail should be granted, but was ordered to be held in custody until his next court appearance on Tuesday.
     
    Vader was first charged in 2012 — two years after Lyle and Marie McCann disappeared in July 2010.
     
    Both counts of murder were not proceeded with in March and police had one year to re-activate them.
     
    He was arrested on Friday _ his lawyer Brian Beresh said his client was “very upset” over being taken back into custody.
     
    Police discovered the charred remains of the elderly couple’s motorhome but their bodies have never been found.
     
    The McCanns were last seen alive when they fuelled up the vehicle in their hometown of St. Albert, north of Edmonton.
     
    There were just a few weeks to go before the trial was to begin when the charges against Vader were stayed last March.
     
    Greg Lepp, head of the province’s Crown prosecution service, explained at the time that his office had recently received new evidence from the RCMP. He said he couldn’t reveal what that evidence was, only that prosecutors needed time to examine it and couldn’t proceed with the trial at the time.
     
    Police said Sunday that they weren’t able to provide any further public comment on the arrest.
     
    Beresh said he was surprised by the move because there have been no new developments in the case.
     
    Earlier this year, Vader filed lawsuits against prosecutors and the RCMP claiming malicious prosecution. He alleged he was kept in custody on trumped-up charges until he could be charged with murdering the McCanns. He also said he was mistreated by staff in the Edmonton Remand Centre.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Government Awards $200,000 Contract To Study Gabriola Bridge That Could Replace BC Ferries Serv

    B.C. Government Awards $200,000 Contract To Study Gabriola Bridge That Could Replace BC Ferries Serv
    VICTORIA — A $200,000 contract has been awarded to a Colorado-based company to study the feasibility of linking Gabriola Island and Vancouver Island by bridge.

    B.C. Government Awards $200,000 Contract To Study Gabriola Bridge That Could Replace BC Ferries Serv

    BC Ferries plans off-peak travel discounts

    BC Ferries plans off-peak travel discounts
    BC Ferries says its customers should have the opportunity to access an airline-style reservation system to book discounted fares online at off-peak travel times.

    BC Ferries plans off-peak travel discounts

    Two More Farms In B.C. Under Quarantine Due To Avian Flu

    Two More Farms In B.C. Under Quarantine Due To Avian Flu
    VANCOUVER — The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says two more farms have been placed under quarantine due to avian influenza in British Columbia's Fraser Valley.

    Two More Farms In B.C. Under Quarantine Due To Avian Flu

    Kamloops RCMP Officer Shot During A Traffic Stop Critical, Manhunt Underway

    Kamloops RCMP Officer Shot During A Traffic Stop Critical, Manhunt Underway
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — An officer who was shot during a traffic stop in Kamloops, B.C., is in critical but stable condition and has provided Mounties with helpful information, says a senior Mountie.  

    Kamloops RCMP Officer Shot During A Traffic Stop Critical, Manhunt Underway

    Public drug plans for seniors need overhauling, public policy reports say

    Public drug plans for seniors need overhauling, public policy reports say
    TORONTO — Against a backdrop of Canada's rapidly aging population, two reports are calling for a revamping of government drug insurance plans for seniors, but the solutions they serve up are strikingly different.

    Public drug plans for seniors need overhauling, public policy reports say

    Five people sickened by carbon monoxide in Vancouver

    Five people sickened by carbon monoxide in Vancouver
    Two adults and three children in Vancouver have been taken to hospital with signs of carbon monoxide poisoning.

    Five people sickened by carbon monoxide in Vancouver