Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

No bail hearing for Winnipeg woman accused of hiding dead babies in storage unit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2014 10:38 AM

    WINNIPEG — A woman accused of hiding the remains of six infants in a Winnipeg storage locker could spend the holidays behind bars after her bail hearing was delayed yet again.

    The lawyer for Andrea Giesbrecht (GEEZ'-brehkt) says he can't go ahead with a bail application because the Crown has not shared a complete autopsy report.

    Greg Brodsky says autopsy results are needed to determine how the infants died and how old they were, including whether they were stillborn.

    Giesbrecht, who is 40, is facing six charges of concealing the bodies, along with unrelated fraud charges and a count of breaching a court order.

    Brodsky says he has received a preliminary autopsy report and it doesn't answer many of his questions.

    A new bail hearing date has not been set.

    Giesbrecht has been in custody since her arrest in October following the discovery of the remains by employees at a U-Haul facility. Police said at the onset it could take months of forensic examination before it's known who the parents were, how the infants died and whether they were full term.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Facts and key dates in Ashley Smith case

    Facts and key dates in Ashley Smith case
    Canadian prison authorities on Thursday rejected core recommendations made by the inquest into the horrific choking death of troubled teen Ashley Smith. Here are some facts:

    Facts and key dates in Ashley Smith case

    Feds response to Ashley Smith inquest termed `Orwellian`

    Feds response to Ashley Smith inquest termed `Orwellian`
    TORONTO — Canadian prison authorities are still looking at ways to cut the use of segregation and the time prisoners are forced to spend in isolation, the government said Thursday in responding to the Ashley Smith inquest.

    Feds response to Ashley Smith inquest termed `Orwellian`

    Commons security receive rousing tribute from MPs as Parliament set to recess

    Commons security receive rousing tribute from MPs as Parliament set to recess
    OTTAWA — Security officers who guard the House of Commons were given a rousing tribute in the chamber they are there to protect.

    Commons security receive rousing tribute from MPs as Parliament set to recess

    Tory member Michael Chong's bill to re-empower MPs passes another hurdle

    Tory member Michael Chong's bill to re-empower MPs passes another hurdle
    OTTAWA — A Conservative backbench MP's bill designed to restore a measure of power to MPs in Parliament has passed another critical hurdle.

    Tory member Michael Chong's bill to re-empower MPs passes another hurdle

    Christmas likely can't come early enough for embattled Fantino, government

    Christmas likely can't come early enough for embattled Fantino, government
    OTTAWA — Longtime denizens of Parliament Hill know Veterans Affairs as a troublesome, thankless ministerial assignment, but it rarely generates the kind of sustained political heat the Harper government is hoping will dissipate with the coming Christmas break.

    Christmas likely can't come early enough for embattled Fantino, government

    Multibillion-dollar lawsuit against Big Tobacco now in the hands of judge

    Multibillion-dollar lawsuit against Big Tobacco now in the hands of judge
    MONTREAL — A class-action lawsuit that targets three Canadian tobacco manufacturers for nearly $20 billion has ended after nearly three years of testimony.

    Multibillion-dollar lawsuit against Big Tobacco now in the hands of judge