Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Bhupinderpal Gill And Gurpreet Ronald Win Appeal: Will Face New Trial For Murder Of Jagtar Gill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Dec, 2019 09:28 PM

    Ontario's top court has ordered a new trial for an Ottawa man and his former lover who were convicted in the grisly slaying of the man's wife.

     

    Bhupinderpal Gill and Gurpreet Ronald were found guilty in 2016 of first-degree murder in the death of Jagtar Gill, who was discovered beaten, stabbed and with her throat slashed in the family home in 2014.

     

    Court heard the two co-accused met at the city's transit agency, where they both worked, and eventually began a sexual relationship despite being married to other people.

     

     

    The pair testified their affair ended months before the killing, but court heard they remained close.

     

    Prosecutors alleged the two plotted the murder together and Ronald carried it out, though Bhupinderpal Gill's lawyer argued that the woman acted alone.

     

    In a unanimous ruling released today, the Court of Appeal for Ontario says the judge who oversaw the trial erred in not allowing jurors to consider a conviction of second-degree murder for Ronald.

     

    The appeal court says the evidence heard at trial allowed for the possibility that Ronald killed Jagtar Gill but that the murder was not premeditated, and the jury should have been permitted to consider that option.

     

     

    The trial judge's error also unfairly "undermined" Bhupinderpal Gill's central defence that his former lover had either planned the murder on her own or done it without premeditation, by removing one of the two options under which the jury could find she had acted alone.

     

    As a result, the appeal court says, both are entitled to new trials on the charge of first-degree murder.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    British Columbians Urged To Prepare For Winter Storms

    British Columbians Urged To Prepare For Winter Storms
    As winter weather rolls in provincewide, British Columbians need to prepare for slick streets, freezing temperatures and power outages so they can stay safe and warm.    

    British Columbians Urged To Prepare For Winter Storms

    UPDATE: Surrey Police Response To Youth Criminal Activity In Newton

    Police have been actively engaged in this issue since March, investigating 50 individuals connected to these groups, and working with business and property managers to improve area safety.

    UPDATE: Surrey Police Response To Youth Criminal Activity In Newton

    Anti-Racism Network Launches To Build Safer Communities For People

    Communities throughout British Columbia will be safer and more inclusive for people with the launch of the Resilience BC Anti-Racism Network.

    Anti-Racism Network Launches To Build Safer Communities For People

    Vancouver Empty Homes Tax Nets Another $39M As Number Of Vacant Properties Drop, City Says

    Since the City’s Empty Homes Tax (EHT) was launched in 2016, the program has created $39.7 million in net revenue to fund affordable housing initiatives across the city. There has also been an increase in occupied properties and a decrease in vacant properties.

    Vancouver Empty Homes Tax Nets Another $39M As Number Of Vacant Properties Drop, City Says

    Ford Says He's Learning French, Offers A 'Bonjour, Comment Ca Va' As Evidence

    TORONTO - Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he is working on learning French and thinks it will be "pretty easy" to pick up.    

    Ford Says He's Learning French, Offers A 'Bonjour, Comment Ca Va' As Evidence

    Woman Calls 911 To Say She Was Late For Train, Asks Police For 'Emergency Ride'

    Woman Calls 911 To Say She Was Late For Train, Asks Police For 'Emergency Ride'
    A 911 call from a woman who was running for a train has prompted police in southern Ontario to remind people that the number is meant for emergencies only.

    Woman Calls 911 To Say She Was Late For Train, Asks Police For 'Emergency Ride'