Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Dad Appeals Conviction In Death Of Daughter Whose Body Was Found In Burning Suitcase

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2016 12:01 PM
    TORONTO — A man found guilty in the death of his horrifically abused teenage daughter, whose charred remains were found in a burning suitcase two decades ago, plans to appeal his conviction at Ontario's highest court.
     
    Everton Biddersingh argues there is still evidence in his case which has not been submitted to court.
     
    The 60-year-old also argues the judge who presided over his trial made an error in allowing the jury that decided the case to consider a suggestion that he starved his daughter.
     
    Biddersingh was found guilty in January of first-degree murder in the death of his 17-year-old daughter Melonie, whose emaciated body was found burned beyond recognition 21 years ago.
     
    He was sentenced in February to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.
     
    In handing down his sentence, Superior Court Justice Al O'Marra called Melonie's life with her father "an unspeakable horror."
     
    In a notice of appeal submitted to the Ontario Court of Appeal, Biddersingh sought to challenge both his conviction and his sentence.
     
    His trial involved weeks of graphic evidence and emotional testimony about the abuse Melonie suffered before she died in Sept. 1994.
     
    The case took years to get to trial because police weren't initially able to identify Melonie's remains until they received a tip that eventually led to Biddersingh's arrest in March 2012.
     
    The trial heard that Melonie and two brothers came to Canada from Jamaica in 1991 to live with their father, hoping for a life that would offer them more opportunities for the future.
     
    Jurors heard that Melonie — who dreamt of becoming a nurse — was not sent to school and was treated like a slave.
     
    Court heard the girl suffered brutal beatings, food deprivation and gut-wrenching abuse at the hands of her father, which included being chained to furniture and having her head held down in a flushing toilet.
     
    The Crown maintained Biddersingh drowned or starved his daughter after a period of prolonged abuse, or that the teen died while her father unlawfully confined her in his small Toronto apartment.
     
    After she died, the Crown alleged Biddersingh crammed his daughter into a suitcase, drove her body to a remote area north of Toronto and set it on fire.
     
    Biddersingh then told Melonie's mother, who lived in Jamaica, and other family and friends that the teen had run away from home, the trial heard. He didn't file a missing person's report.
     
    Biddersingh's defence lawyers argued at trial that experts had concluded the teen drowned but no evidence showed it was her father who actually did it.
     
    Expert evidence indicated Melonie had 21 "healing fractures'' in her ribs, spine, pelvis, right knee and left ankle that were caused three weeks to six months before her death.
     
    It also indicated that Melonie had inhaled water shortly before her death.
     
    The jury heard the girl weighed only about 50 pounds when she died.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    To Kill Or Not To Kill? OSPCA Seeks To Destroy 21 Alleged Fighting Dogs

    To Kill Or Not To Kill? OSPCA Seeks To Destroy 21 Alleged Fighting Dogs
    Twenty-one alleged fighting dogs sit in a kennel in an undisclosed location somewhere in Ontario, where they'll remain until a court decides whether they live or die.

    To Kill Or Not To Kill? OSPCA Seeks To Destroy 21 Alleged Fighting Dogs

    Polar Bear Encounters With Humans On The Rise, More Put In Churchill Jail

    Polar bear activity reports from the past three years show the number of documented cases in Churchill has jumped from 229 in 2013 to 351 last year.

    Polar Bear Encounters With Humans On The Rise, More Put In Churchill Jail

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death
    TimberWest Forest Corp. spokeswoman Monica Bailey said an equipment operator was killed Friday afternoon at the company's Bonanza Lake site near Port McNeill.

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees
    A choir sings hymns of peace on a downtown Vancouver beach while a small dinghy gently coasts ashore and a dozen people in life jackets, including a young boy, alight onto the sand.

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees

    Potential Tory Leaderships Candidates Test The Waters At Weekend Conference

    With no formal rules in place for the 2017 Conservative leadership vote, no candidate has yet to formally enter the race.

    Potential Tory Leaderships Candidates Test The Waters At Weekend Conference

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby
    The province tabled a bill last December aimed at setting up its own log three years after the Conservatives abolished the federal database for non-restricted guns, known as the long-gun registry.

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby