Wednesday, January 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ex-Pastor Convicted In Wife's Death Secretly Drugged Her, Crown Argues

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Sep, 2019 07:24 PM

    TORONTO - Prosecutors are asking an Ontario judge to rule that a former pastor convicted in the death of his pregnant wife was the one who gave her a sedative before she drowned.

     

    The Crown is making submissions on what the court should deem as a fact in sentencing Philip Grandine, who was found guilty of manslaughter in February in the death of his wife Anna Grandine.

     

    Jurors were told they could convict Philip Grandine if they found he secretly drugged his wife with the anti-anxiety drug lorazepam or provided it to her; or he knew she had taken it and did nothing to stop her from getting in the bath while under its influence.

     

    Now prosecutors say the judge should rule that Philip Grandine surreptitiously administered the medication better known as Ativan to his wife, having stolen it from his workplace with the intention of incapacitating her.

     

    They are also asking the court to find that Anna Grandine, who went by Karissa, did not knowingly consume the drug.

     

    Anna Grandine was 20 weeks pregnant when she died in October 2011, and tests later revealed she had lorazepam in her blood despite never being prescribed it.

     

    Defence lawyers had argued she took the medication herself and either slipped and drowned in the tub or took her own life.

     

    Court heard at trial that Philip Grandine had recently stepped down as pastor after his affair with a parishioner, who was also his wife's friend, was uncovered.

     

    He then began working at a nursing home where he was responsible for distributing and disposing of medication, court heard.

     

    Superior Court Justice Faye McWatt will rule on the facts of the case at a later date, allowing the Crown and defence to make submissions on an appropriate sentence.

     

    This is Philip Grandine's second trial in connection with his wife's death.

     

    In the first trial, on a charge of first-degree murder, he was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to 15 years in prison.

     

    The conviction was overturned on appeal, however, after Ontario's highest court found the trial judge had made an error in answering a question from the jury.

     

    A new trial was ordered on the manslaughter charge, precluding prosecutors from arguing Philip Grandine intended to kill his wife.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Delta Police Looking For Witnesses, Dashcam Video In Deltaport Way Crash That Killed Surrey Truck Driver Rajvinder Singh Sidhu

    Were you travelling southbound in Delta on Hwy 17 or Deltaport Way on the morning of June 13, between 9-9:30 am?

    Delta Police Looking For Witnesses, Dashcam Video In Deltaport Way Crash That Killed Surrey Truck Driver Rajvinder Singh Sidhu

    Suspicious Death At South Vancouver Store Now Considered as City’s Sixth Homicide Of 2019: Police

    Suspicious Death At South Vancouver Store Now Considered as City’s Sixth Homicide Of 2019: Police
    The Suspicious Death Of A Man At A South Vancouver Appliance Store Is Now Being Treated As A Homicide By Police.

    Suspicious Death At South Vancouver Store Now Considered as City’s Sixth Homicide Of 2019: Police

    VPD Identifies Victim In City’s Fifth Homicide As 33-year-Old Vaughan Bradley Lim

    VPD Identifies Victim In City’s Fifth Homicide As 33-year-Old Vaughan Bradley Lim
    Vancouver Police have identified 33-year-old Vaughan Bradley Lim as the victim in the city’s fifth homicide.

    VPD Identifies Victim In City’s Fifth Homicide As 33-year-Old Vaughan Bradley Lim

    Couple Loses Almost Everything When U-Haul Stolen In Abbotsford, B.C.

    U-Haul moving truck was packed with almost all the couple's possessions when it was stolen from a hotel parking lot in Abbotsford sometime between last Friday night and Saturday.

    Couple Loses Almost Everything When U-Haul Stolen In Abbotsford, B.C.

    Supercar Impounded 10 Minutes After Owner Picked It Up From Dealership: Police

    Police say in a news release that a traffic officer saw a 2019 McLaren 600L-T supercar travelling at a high rate of speed westbound on Highway 1 near 15th Street on June 17.

    Supercar Impounded 10 Minutes After Owner Picked It Up From Dealership: Police

    Extensive Search Now Suspended For New Brunswick Man Thomas Hines Missing In B.C.

    Thomas Hines, who recently moved from Sackville, N.B., to the small community of Egmont, B.C., was last seen on June 17, canoeing on Waugh Lake, not far from his new home.

    Extensive Search Now Suspended For New Brunswick Man Thomas Hines Missing In B.C.