Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

BC Judge Declines To Hear Application To Throw Out Gang Murder Convictions

The Canadian Press , 19 Nov, 2014 12:19 PM
  • BC Judge Declines To Hear Application To Throw Out Gang Murder Convictions
VANCOUVER — A judge has declined to hear an abuse-of-process application from two gangsters who were seeking to throw out their murder convictions.
 
Cody Haevischer and Matthew Johnston were convicted last month of six counts of first-degree murder and conspiracy in a shooting that left six people dead, including two innocent bystanders, in Surrey, B.C.
 
Their lawyers argued the behaviour of RCMP officers who investigated the murders and the conditions they faced in jail amounted to an abuse of process, and they asked that the murder charges be stayed.
 
B.C. Supreme Court Judge Catherine Wedge says there were serious abuses, both during the police investigation and while the men were in jail.
 
But she says those problems do not justify staying the charges and instead the convictions will now be entered, clearing the way for sentencing of the two men.
 
The Crown's theory at trial was that the murders began as a hit on a rival drug trafficker, but that five other victims, including two men with no ties to gangs or drugs, were killed to eliminate potential witnesses.

MORE National ARTICLES

Avalanche, blizzard kill 12 people, including 4 Canadians in Nepal

Avalanche, blizzard kill 12 people, including 4 Canadians in Nepal
KATMANDU, Nepal - An avalanche and a blizzard in Nepal's mountainous north have killed 12 people, including four Canadians, officials said Wednesday.

Avalanche, blizzard kill 12 people, including 4 Canadians in Nepal

Mom of first woman killed in Afghanistan combat proud vessel named for daughter

Mom of first woman killed in Afghanistan combat proud vessel named for daughter
HALIFAX - The mother of the first Canadian woman to be killed in Afghanistan in a combat role says she feels her daughter would be proud to have a coast guard vessel named after her.

Mom of first woman killed in Afghanistan combat proud vessel named for daughter

Natural gas leak in Halifax prompts evacuations in business park

Natural gas leak in Halifax prompts evacuations in business park
HALIFAX - As many as 50 buildings have been evacuated in a Halifax-area business park because of a natural gas leak.

Natural gas leak in Halifax prompts evacuations in business park

Greed, incompetence, neglect behind deadly mall collapse, inquiry finds

Greed, incompetence, neglect behind deadly mall collapse, inquiry finds
ELLIOT LAKE, Ont. - Decades of incompetence, neglect, greed and dishonesty by a succession of owners, engineers and municipal officials led to the deadly cave-in of a northern Ontario mall two years ago, a judicial inquiry reported Wednesday.

Greed, incompetence, neglect behind deadly mall collapse, inquiry finds

Key recommendations of the Elliot Lake inquiry

Key recommendations of the Elliot Lake inquiry
ELLIOT LAKE, Ont. - The inquiry into the deadly collapse of a mall in Elliot Lake, Ont., two years ago reported on Wednesday. Some key recommendations:

Key recommendations of the Elliot Lake inquiry

Supreme Court confronts question of whether Canadians can seek help to die

OTTAWA - Assisted suicide should only apply to cases involving patients who are never going to get better, the Supreme Court heard today as it confronted the question of whether Canadians have the right to seek help to end their lives.

Supreme Court confronts question of whether Canadians can seek help to die