Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Defence In Guy Turcotte Case To Argue For Verdict Of Not Criminally Responsible

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Oct, 2015 11:09 AM
    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — Lawyers for accused murderer Guy Turcotte will argue he should be found not criminally responsible in the stabbing deaths of his two young children.
     
    Turcotte has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder but has admitted to causing the 2009 deaths of Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3.
     
    Lawyer Pierre Poupart told the 11 jurors at Turcotte's first-degree murder trial on Monday he will call witnesses as well as experts — "doctors specialized in the examination of what goes on in the brain."
     
    He also reminded them they will need to reach a verdict based on the evidence and not on their emotions.
     
    "Condemning a person who is not criminally responsible would shake the legal foundations and strike a blow to the integrity of the judicial system," Poupart said.
     
    "It would be horrible to be condemned for acts that are not the acts of a person of sound mind."
     
    He warned jurors there are still things to see that are painful and that nobody, even Turcotte himself, can be insensitive to the facts of the case.
     
    The defence lawyer also asked the jurors to not forget that "the children who were victims of this tragedy were also his children."
     
    The Crown wrapped up its case last week after calling 29 witnesses.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Auto Sector Says Harper's $1-billion Pledge Key To Industry's Post-TPP Survival

    Auto Sector Says Harper's $1-billion Pledge Key To Industry's Post-TPP Survival
    Harper announced that a re-elected Conservative government would provide a $1-billion package over a decade by extending the government's Automotive Innovation Fund.

    Auto Sector Says Harper's $1-billion Pledge Key To Industry's Post-TPP Survival

    Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears

    Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears
    Sgt. Mark Smith is facing cross-examination today in the second-degree murder trial of Dennis Oland in New Brunswick's Court of Queen's Bench.

    Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears

    Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight

    Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight
    Jagdish Grewal, who is running in Mississauga-Malton, wrote an editorial entitled "Is it wrong for a homosexual to become a normal person?" that referred to homosexuality as "unnatural behaviour" and heterosexuals as "normal."

    Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight

    CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

    CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency
    In what the Appeal Court called "most unusual" circumstances, the justices said a lower court was wrong to deny Golam Mehedi a chance to reopen his case given the post-trial broadcast.

    CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

    Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean

    Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean
    Aldean's 2015 Burn It Down tour played in Kamloops, B.C., on Monday night and was headed to a Tuesday performance in Prince George, when all those cliches about trucks, dirt roads and disaster played out.

    Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean

    Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos

    Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos
    It's called SNOLAB, a cavernous "clean" lab that was able to detect minuscule particles known as neutrinos. 

    Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos