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

Calgary: Provincial Courthouses Closed Due To Massive Power Outage

Calgary: Provincial Courthouses Closed Due To Massive Power Outage
CALGARY - Provincial courthouses in Calgary are going be closed due to a massive power outage affecting more than 100 buildings in the city's downtown.

Calgary: Provincial Courthouses Closed Due To Massive Power Outage

Peter DeGroot, Suspect in Shootout in Slocan, B.C. is now Dead: RCMP

Peter DeGroot, Suspect in Shootout in Slocan, B.C. is now Dead: RCMP

SLOCAN CITY, B.C. - The subject of a police manhunt in southern British Columbia after an exchang...

Peter DeGroot, Suspect in Shootout in Slocan, B.C. is now Dead: RCMP

Brampton: Police Investigating Possible Murder-suicide Involving 3 People

Brampton: Police Investigating Possible Murder-suicide Involving 3 People
  BRAMPTON, Ont. - Southern Ontario police say the three people found dead in a Brampton home, northwest of Toronto, may have been involved in a double murder-suicide.

Brampton: Police Investigating Possible Murder-suicide Involving 3 People

Control Of Education Policy At Stake As B.C. Appeals Teachers' Court Victories

Control Of Education Policy At Stake As B.C. Appeals Teachers' Court Victories
VANCOUVER - A pair of court cases that became the rallying point for British Columbia's teachers during the longest provincewide strike in its history goes back on the docket this week, ushering a holdover from the summertime dispute into legal chambers.

Control Of Education Policy At Stake As B.C. Appeals Teachers' Court Victories

All Eyes On Canada's Supreme Court This Week As It Hears Assisted Suicide Appeal

All Eyes On Canada's Supreme Court This Week As It Hears Assisted Suicide Appeal
OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada hears an appeal this week delving into an issue that's increasingly resonating with Canadians as the country's population ages — the right to assisted suicide for the terminally ill.

All Eyes On Canada's Supreme Court This Week As It Hears Assisted Suicide Appeal

Busy fire season in national parks, Parks Canada annual report says

Busy fire season in national parks, Parks Canada annual report says
The number of wildfires in Canada's national parks was close to average last summer, but the size of some of those fires made it an unusually hot season.

Busy fire season in national parks, Parks Canada annual report says