Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man Charged In Deaths Of Calgary Mother, Girl Has Record Of Trafficking, Prostitution

The Canadian Press, 15 Jul, 2016 12:40 PM
  • Man Charged In Deaths Of Calgary Mother, Girl Has Record Of Trafficking, Prostitution
CALGARY — Details emerged Friday about the criminal record dating back nearly 20 years of a man charged in the deaths of a Calgary woman and her five-year-old daughter.
 
Court records show Edward Delten Downey was convicted in 2008 of trafficking cocaine and possession of an unauthorized firearm. He was sentenced to four years.
 
Downey, who also went by the last name Simmonds, also served time for aiding in prostitution in 1998.
 
He also faced several charges over the years related to stolen property, drugs, weapons and prostitution, but they were withdrawn. 
 
Police charged Downey, 46, late Thursday with first-degree murder in the slayings of Sara Baillie, who was 34, and her daughter Taliyah Marsman.
 
 
Baillie was found in their Calgary home on Monday and an Amber Alert was issued when Taliyah could not be found. The child's body was discovered on a rural property east of the city on Thursday.
 
Police said earlier that Downey knew the victims' family. Court documents filed when he was charged say he is not allowed to contact Taliyah's father, Colin Marsman.
 
Downey's next court appearance is scheduled for Wednesday.
 
Investigators were collecting more evidence Friday in the area where the girl was found.
 
"There's ... lots of work to still do," a sombre Insp. Don Coleman said late Thursday at a news conference after Taliyah's body was found near a road beside a field.
 
No effort had been made to bury the girl.
 
Coleman said the investigation has concluded Taliyah was already dead by the time police had been called by concerned family.
 
"There was nothing we could do before we even got involved."
 
Coleman said it's believed Baillie was the primary target. The cause of Taliyah's death was not known, but an autopsy was to be done later Friday.
 
 
"We were hoping for a different outcome. The family is devastated, clearly," Coleman said.
 
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley, both in Calgary for the Stampede, offered their condolences.
 
"We all need to take a moment to send our love and hearts out to Taliyah and Sara's family," said Trudeau.
 
"There were so many volunteers and police services involved in trying to help a terrible situation."
 
"In the face of such senseless and tragic loss we reach out with love and with a desire to help each other," Notley said.
 
Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi simply said: "Our hearts are all broken."
 
Taliyah had last been seen by her relatives on Sunday, and security cameras captured her and her mother at a Dairy Queen later that day.
 
The next morning, a girl matching Taliyah's description was seen near the family's home with a man. She was carrying a suitcase.
 
Baillie's relatives called police Monday when she didn't show up for work. After officers found her body later that night, they issued an Amber Alert for the girl.
 
 
On Wednesday, a suspect was taken into custody at a strip mall. Coleman said he was giving "zero co-operation" to investigators, although the inspector later amended that to "limited" co-operation.
 
Coleman also said the suspect was known to police and had an extensive criminal background with some violence.
 
Downey appeared before a judge late Thursday.
 
Police Chief Roger Chaffin said 100 officers had been working around the clock the last number of days.
 
"Unfortunately they are completely devastated by the loss, as am I," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News

CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News
OTTAWA — Canada's broadcast regulator is forcing English-language TV stations to air at least seven hours a week of local news, and creating a new fund to help the smaller ones pay for it as part of a "rebalancing" of the country's television landscape.

CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News

Cape Breton University Soccer Player Banned From Play After Drug Violation

OTTAWA — An elite soccer player from Cape Breton has been banned from the game for 18 months after admitting to taking a prohibited substance last year.

Cape Breton University Soccer Player Banned From Play After Drug Violation

Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans

Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans
Canadian companies are cashing in on so-called anti-Trumpism in the United States, offering our neighbours to the south an escape plan should Donald Trump win the presidential election in November.

Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans

$85m Grant For Chrysler Not Corporate Welfare, Wynne Says

  Wynne made the announcement today at the Fiat Chrysler Automotive Research and Development Centre in Windsor.

$85m Grant For Chrysler Not Corporate Welfare, Wynne Says

Manitoba Legislature Could See Gender-Neutral Washrooms: Premier

Manitoba Legislature Could See Gender-Neutral Washrooms: Premier
Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister, a Progressive Conservative long accused by his NDP opponents of being homophobic, said Tuesday he is considering a request to have a gender-neutral public washroom in the legislature.

Manitoba Legislature Could See Gender-Neutral Washrooms: Premier

RCMP Investigating 3 Sex Assault Allegations Against Male Student: SFU

RCMP Investigating 3 Sex Assault Allegations Against Male Student: SFU
Male student who is the subject of the allegations is not on campus, but he did not say if he was suspended or expelled.

RCMP Investigating 3 Sex Assault Allegations Against Male Student: SFU