Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Jury Should Consider If Confession Details Came From Police, Media: Judge

The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2019 09:30 PM

    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia judge has told jurors they will have to decide whether a man who confessed to killing a 12-year-old girl could have obtained details about the crime from police or media reports.


    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Austin Cullen is instructing a jury that is expected to start deliberations later today in the trial of Garry Handlen, who confessed to the 1978 murder during a police undercover operation.


    Monica Jack was last seen in Merritt while riding her bike and her remains were discovered in the area 17 years later.


    Handlen became the subject of a so-called Mr. Big sting in early 2014 and provided an alleged confession recorded on a hidden camera and shown to the jury during the first-degree murder trial.


    Defence lawyer Patrick Angly has argued Handlen was provided information about the crime by the RCMP in 1978 when he was interviewed and also by a supposed crime boss asking leading questions.


    Angly has said the crime boss was referring to a newspaper article about the crime while trying to extract a confession in 2014, and Handlen could have read some information he parroted back and may also have known details about Jack’s murder from a television documentary.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Electoral Reform Option Designed By University Of Alberta Student

    His hometown riding in northern Alberta was a secure seat for a party that he didn't support, so voting for anyone else under the first-past-the-post system felt like a wasted ballot.

    B.C. Electoral Reform Option Designed By University Of Alberta Student

    Premier Rachel Notley Unveils Carbon Tax Break For Drilling Companies

    Premier Rachel Notley Unveils Carbon Tax Break For Drilling Companies
    CALGARY — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is handing out tax breaks for oil and gas drillers along with criticism of Ottawa's lack of appreciation for how damaging are current price discounts on western Canadian oil.

    Premier Rachel Notley Unveils Carbon Tax Break For Drilling Companies

    Man Charged With Fraud In Money-Raising Schemes For Humboldt Broncos

    SASKATOON — RCMP in Saskatchewan say a man has been charged after two fake fundraising efforts for the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team were discovered.

    Man Charged With Fraud In Money-Raising Schemes For Humboldt Broncos

    Sunwing Pilot Temperature Typo Could Have Had 'Catastrophic' Results: Report

    A report by the U.K.'s Air Accidents Investigation Branch says the Boeing Co. 737 lifted off at the "extreme end" of a runway in Belfast after the autopilot determined the takeoff speed based on a temperature of -52 C, rather than 16 C.

    Sunwing Pilot Temperature Typo Could Have Had 'Catastrophic' Results: Report

    RCMP Probe Centres On Roles, Duties Of Suspended Legislature Officials: Adviser

    RCMP Probe Centres On Roles, Duties Of Suspended Legislature Officials: Adviser
    VICTORIA — A special adviser to the Speaker at British Columbia's legislature says an ongoing RCMP investigation is focusing on the roles and administrative duties of the clerk of the house and its sergeant-at-arms.

    RCMP Probe Centres On Roles, Duties Of Suspended Legislature Officials: Adviser

    Otter 6, Humans 0 In Battle Of Wits To Oust Koi Muncher From Vancouver Garden

    VANCOUVER — A river otter with a taste for valuable koi carp may also have a flair for drama as it continues to avoid humane traps and confound efforts to remove it from a classical Chinese garden in downtown Vancouver.

    Otter 6, Humans 0 In Battle Of Wits To Oust Koi Muncher From Vancouver Garden