Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man Was In Relationship With Halifax Yoga Teacher When He Killed Her: Crown

The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2018 12:40 PM
    HALIFAX — Kristin Johnston had told friends she wanted to break up with Nicholas Butcher hours before he murdered the popular yoga instructor and tried to kill himself inside her Halifax-area home, a Crown lawyer said Wednesday.
     
     
    During her opening statement at Butcher's second-degree murder trial, prosecutor Tanya Carter said the 35-year-old man "couldn't be without Kristin Johnston, and killed her."
     
     
    "The evidence is not complicated. Kristin's life ended in tragedy, and the evidence points to Mr. Butcher committing murder," Carter told the Nova Scotia Supreme Court jury.
     
     
    Carter said the evidence will show that the pair were dating in March 2016 when Johnston, originally from Montreal, decided to end the relationship.
     
     
    At the time, Butcher was living with Johnston at her home in Purcells Cove, she said.
     
     
    Carter said on the evening of March 25, 2016, Johnston was at a bar in the north end of Halifax, spending time with friends.
     
     
    "She talked about her plans for the future, her difficulty with finding the best way to break up with Mr. Butcher and her desire not to go home that night," said Carter.
     
     
    Later that evening, the 32-year-old woman went to a friend's house nearby. However, Butcher found out where she was and went there, speaking with Johnston before leaving the house without her, the Crown lawyer said.
     
     
    "Mr. Butcher went to the same house again a couple of hours later, unhappy with Kristin's continued presence," she said.
     
     
    Johnston's friend briefly left the apartment, and "that was the last time Kristin was seen alive," Carter said.
     
     
    When the friend returned, Johnston and Butcher were gone.
     
     
    The next morning, Butcher called 911 and told the call taker he had killed his girlfriend and tried to kill himself, said Carter.
     
     
    She said the medical examiner will testify that Johnston had 10 wounds on her neck, and that her death was caused by sharp force.
     
     
    Butcher, a graduate of Dalhousie University's law school, has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.
     
     
    Johnston, who had opened a Bikram yoga studio in downtown Halifax, had a reputation as a kind and determined businesswoman with what friends described as a "magnetic'' personality.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Makes Changes To Speculation Tax After Criticism From Homeowners

    B.C. Makes Changes To Speculation Tax After Criticism From Homeowners
    Finance Minister Carol James is also adjusting the tax rate after first announcing details of the levy in the budget last month.

    B.C. Makes Changes To Speculation Tax After Criticism From Homeowners

    Worker Killed In Fall At BC Residential Construction Site

    Worker Killed In Fall At BC Residential Construction Site
    The RCMP say officers were sent to the site Sunday evening after receiving reports that a man's body had been found.

    Worker Killed In Fall At BC Residential Construction Site

    Power Use Rises During Earth Hour In B.C. For First Time In Decade

    Earth Hour is an annual World Wildlife Fund event that encourages people across the globe to turn off their lights for one hour to draw attention to climate change.

    Power Use Rises During Earth Hour In B.C. For First Time In Decade

    Online Building Materials Firm Completes Refinancing, Emerges From CCAA Process

    Online Building Materials Firm Completes Refinancing, Emerges From CCAA Process
    VANCOUVER — Online building materials seller BuildDirect.com Technologies Inc. says it has completed a refinancing that allows it to emerge from court protection from creditors in Canada and the U.S. five months after it was granted.

    Online Building Materials Firm Completes Refinancing, Emerges From CCAA Process

    Rare Cholera Outbreak On Vancouver Island: 'We Have Not Seen This Before'

    Rare Cholera Outbreak On Vancouver Island: 'We Have Not Seen This Before'
    VANCOUVER — As many as four people have been infected with cholera in British Columbia, in what health officials are calling an extremely rare case.

    Rare Cholera Outbreak On Vancouver Island: 'We Have Not Seen This Before'

    Canadian Customs Facilities In The U.S.? Americans Say It Could Happen Soon

    Canadian Customs Facilities In The U.S.? Americans Say It Could Happen Soon
    A U.S. official says he hopes to see movement soon on the so-called customs preclearance sites.  

    Canadian Customs Facilities In The U.S.? Americans Say It Could Happen Soon