Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Saskatoon Police Told Day Before Baby Killed Of Whereabouts Of Accused Killer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jul, 2016 12:53 PM
    Saskatoon police confirm they got a tip about the whereabouts of a 16-year-old girl accused of killing a six-week-old infant a day before his death.
     
    Officers found the injured baby boy at a home in the city on Sunday morning.
     
    The baby died in hospital and the teen was charged with second-degree murder and escaping lawful custody.
     
    A cousin of the baby’s mother says she called police Saturday at 3:33 p.m. notifying them that the 16-year-old girl was with a member of their family.
     
    She says she told police the accused girl's name and that the girl told them she had escaped from an open-custody facility.
     
    Saskatoon police got a call from the facility shortly after the girl ran away at 12:45 a.m. Saturday and broadcast her name and description to cruisers.
     
    Alyson Edwards with Saskatoon police said the cousin told police of two possible locations where the teen might be found. But because she couldn't confirm which one the teen was at, police did not send a car and asked the cousin to call back when the girl was at a certain location.
     
     
    Edwards said no further phone calls were received from anyone in the family following the initial tip.
     
    The cousin said she did see the girl again while at her sister’s home, but she didn’t phone police because she felt the call-taker wasn’t taking the matter seriously.
     
    Edwards said based on the call, the taker asked the required questions.
     
    Saskatoon police are looking into whether all procedures were followed correctly in the handling of the call.
     
    The boy's maternal grandfather has said his daughter met the girl downtown and realized that she had nowhere to go. He said the teen was "lost to society and the world," so his sympathetic daughter brought her home.
     
    The accused was sentenced last December to 10 months in open custody for break and enter, arson, assault causing bodily harm, assault with a weapon and robbery with a weapon. She was also to serve five months of community supervision after her time in custody.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Orthodox Mennonite Man In Manitoba Gets Jail Time For Assaulting Children

    Orthodox Mennonite Man In Manitoba Gets Jail Time For Assaulting Children
    BRANDON, Man. — A man from an Orthodox Mennonite community in Manitoba has been sentenced to 18 months in jail for assaults on several children.

    Orthodox Mennonite Man In Manitoba Gets Jail Time For Assaulting Children

    Universities relax admission rules for Fort McMurray, Alta., students

    Universities relax admission rules for Fort McMurray, Alta., students
    Post-secondary institutions across Alberta are doing their utmost to make life easier for high school graduates impacted by the wildfires in Fort McMurray.

    Universities relax admission rules for Fort McMurray, Alta., students

    Elusive Toronto Capybara Captured After Escape From Park Zoo

    Elusive Toronto Capybara Captured After Escape From Park Zoo
    TORONTO — The second of two large rodents that broke out of a Toronto zoo and captured the city's attention has been rounded up.

    Elusive Toronto Capybara Captured After Escape From Park Zoo

    Court Approves Extradition Of Suspected Cyberbully In Amanda Todd Case

    AMSTERDAM — An Amsterdam court has approved the extradition of a Dutch man suspected him of a string of crimes against British Columbia teenager Amanda Todd, who took her own life after being bullied online.

    Court Approves Extradition Of Suspected Cyberbully In Amanda Todd Case

    Google Offers New Way For Users To Manage Ads, Personal Data

    SAN FRANCISCO — Google is trying to make it easier for you to manage the vast pool of information that it collects about your online activities across phones, computers and other devices.

    Google Offers New Way For Users To Manage Ads, Personal Data

    $20,000 Radcliffe Foundation Prize To Go To Short Film About Refugee Crisis

    $20,000 Radcliffe Foundation Prize To Go To Short Film About Refugee Crisis
    VANCOUVER — Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, Sarah McLachlan and Atom Egoyan are among the jury members for a new Canadian film prize concerning the global refugee crisis.

    $20,000 Radcliffe Foundation Prize To Go To Short Film About Refugee Crisis