Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

No New Trial For B.c. Serial Killer Because Judge Wasn't Biased: Appeal Court

The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2016 12:56 PM
    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia Court of Appeal has rejected a serial killer's application to have a new trial based on a belief that a judge implied his lawyers behaved unethically.
     
    Cody Legebokoff was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced in September 2014 to life in prison for killing three women and a girl in central B.C. 
     
    His lawyer Eric Gottardi told the B.C. Court of Appeal that the judge made disparaging comments about Legebokoff's counsel but those views were only made public after a sentence was imposed.
     
    The judge said Legebokoff's lawyers had exaggerated and distorted evidence in a 2012 application to have the trial moved to Vancouver, but the man argued in appeal court that he should have been made aware of those beliefs before the trial.
     
    However, B.C. appeal court Justice David Frankel says in a written decision that a judge's view that counsel has acted unprofessionally does not convey bias because judges must decide cases based on facts and the law.
     
    Frankel says Legebokoff was competently represented throughout the trial and there is no suggestion that the judge's views affected how he conducted the proceedings.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Extension Granted For Investigations Into Suspended Victoria Police Chief Frank Elsner

    Extension Granted For Investigations Into Suspended Victoria Police Chief Frank Elsner
    VICTORIA — Investigators looking into allegations of misconduct by Victoria's embattled police chief have once again been granted more time to complete their work.

    Extension Granted For Investigations Into Suspended Victoria Police Chief Frank Elsner

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown
    Police say officers recovered the lions and they have been returned to their original spots in front of the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden.

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for a group of patients who support Canada's public health-care system says a private surgery clinic's legal crusade to change British Columbia's medicare laws puts profit over people.

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast
    The juvenile humpback was freed from several ropes at the Marine Harvest aquaculture site in Klemtu, B.C. by Fisheries and Oceans Canada, with help from the company and the Kitasoo First Nation

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett
    Mounties say Kenneth Fenton faces five charges related to the crash that took the life of Const. Sarah Beckett on April 5 in Langford, B.C.

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick
    Five soldiers with minor injuries were being treated on the base Wednesday, while four others were taken to hospital in Fredericton with serious injuries.

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick