Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Maple Batalia Murder: Gursimar Bedi Found Guilty Of Accessory But Not Guilty Of Manslaughter

Darpan News Desk , 27 May, 2016 01:07 PM
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — A man accused of helping his friend kill a woman in Surrey, B.C., has been acquitted of manslaughter, but found guilty of being an accessory to the murder after the fact.
     
    A B.C. Supreme Court judge in New Westminster said Friday that Gursimar Bedi's rental of a Dodge Charger used as a get-away vehicle the night that Maple Batalia was killed was part of the reason for the guilty verdict on the accessory charge.
     
    The 19-year-old Batalia was shot and killed in the parking lot of Simon Fraser University in September 2011.
     
    Her ex-boyfriend, Gurjinder Dhaliwal, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was sentenced to serve 21 years without parole.
     
    Sgt. Stephanie Ashton, with the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, says the verdict against Bedi should be a reminder that anyone who engages in crime, no matter what their role, will be held responsible.
     
    Bedi, who's 26 years old, will be in court on June 9 to set a date for sentencing.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nova Scotia Government Says Agreement In Principle Reached With 3,500 Doctors

    Nova Scotia Government Says Agreement In Principle Reached With 3,500 Doctors
    The provincial government announced the agreement with Doctors Nova Scotia Friday, although no details were released.

    Nova Scotia Government Says Agreement In Principle Reached With 3,500 Doctors

    House Of Commons Gamesmanship Is 'War By Other Means,' Says Procedural Guru

    House Of Commons Gamesmanship Is 'War By Other Means,' Says Procedural Guru
    For Canadians watching this week's Parliament Hill meltdown with all its competing claims of procedural skulduggery, sorting out the House of Commons rules can feel like watching a game of Calvinball.

    House Of Commons Gamesmanship Is 'War By Other Means,' Says Procedural Guru

    Ontario Bill Targeting Boycott Movement Against Israel Voted Down

    Liberal MPP Mike Colle and Progressive Conservative Tim Hudak jointly presented the private members' bill, with Hudak calling the BDS movement "the insidious new face of anti-Semitism."

    Ontario Bill Targeting Boycott Movement Against Israel Voted Down

    Canada Regulatory Board Greenlights Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Canada Regulatory Board Greenlights Trans Mountain Pipeline
    VANCOUVER — Canada's National Energy Board has recommended the government approve a US$5.9 billion (CA$6.8-billion) Trans Mountain pipeline expansion pending 157 conditions are met.

    Canada Regulatory Board Greenlights Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Consumer Price Index Up 1.7% Compared With Year Ago: Statistics Canada

    The annual pace of inflation picked up in April as the impact of lower energy prices moderated.

    Consumer Price Index Up 1.7% Compared With Year Ago: Statistics Canada

    B.C. Man Caught With Drugs Tries To Bribe Sumas Border Guards $200

    B.C. Man Caught With Drugs Tries To Bribe Sumas Border Guards $200
    Brian James DeCoteau, 52, has been charged with bribing a public servant, a class B felony, in Whatcom County court.

    B.C. Man Caught With Drugs Tries To Bribe Sumas Border Guards $200