Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Son Of Slain Couple Stands By RCMP And Crown Despite Disclosure Problems

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Dec, 2015 12:36 PM
    EDMONTON — The son of an elderly couple believed to be dead after vanishing on a trip to B.C. says he doesn't hold any grudge against RCMP for what a courtroom has been told was their mishandling of evidence disclosure in the case.
     
    Brett McCann has been attending a pre-trial hearing this week for Travis Vader, who is charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the 2010 deaths of Lyle and Marie McCann.
     
    The hearing is looking into arguments by Vader's lawyer, Brian Beresh, that a nearly four-year delay in getting the matter to trial constitutes an abuse of process by the Crown.
     
    Earlier this week, Michelle Doyle, Edmonton's chief prosecutor, called the disclosure of evidence by RCMP "a fiasco."
     
    She said she decided to stay the charges against Vader, who had initially been charged in 2012, two years later because she had lost confidence in the RCMP getting full disclosure to her in a timely manner.
     
    Nine months later, the charges were re-laid and a trial before a judge alone is now scheduled for March 2016.
     
    "Attending these sessions has really renewed my confidence in both the RCMP and in the Crown," Brett McCann said Thursday.
     
    "The stay was due to mishandling by the RCMP, and I'm not really blaming the RCMP, but this massive and complex set of evidence records sounds like it was a formidable thing and it was mishandled."
     
    He said he believes Doyle did the right thing in not proceeding to trial in 2014.
     
    "I admire Michelle Doyle's professionalism in the decision to stay the charges," he said. "She wanted to ultimately ensure a fair trial would take place."
     
    Beresh has suggested the 2014 stay was just a way to buy time so the RCMP would have longer to investigate the case, something Doyle has denied.
     
    Beresh has asked the case either be dismissed or the charges again be stayed, but Brett McCann is confident the trial will go ahead.
     
    He also noted the family's $60,000 reward for information in the case is still out there.
     
    The McCanns, both in their late 70s, were last seen fuelling up their motorhome in their hometown of St. Albert, a bedroom community north of Edmonton, in July 2010. They were on their way to a family camping trip in British Columbia.
     
    Their burned out motorhome was discovered west of Edmonton a few days after they were last seen. Their bodies have never been found.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Doctor Says Methadone Clinic Fee Necessary For Treatment Expectations

    B.C. Doctor Says Methadone Clinic Fee Necessary For Treatment Expectations
    Dr. Jane Clelland said while the province pays for physicians and drugs, public money doesn't cover counselling, which she called necessary.

    B.C. Doctor Says Methadone Clinic Fee Necessary For Treatment Expectations

    Cancer Society Fears New Cigarettes With Squeezable Menthol Filters Will Hook Kids

    Cancer Society Fears New Cigarettes With Squeezable Menthol Filters Will Hook Kids
    One of Canada's largest tobacco companies has introduced a new type of menthol cigarette that the Canadian Cancer Society worries could get more teens and young adults hooked on smoking.

    Cancer Society Fears New Cigarettes With Squeezable Menthol Filters Will Hook Kids

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest Hears From CAS Worker Who Received Calls About Her

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest Hears From CAS Worker Who Received Calls About Her
    TORONTO — A coroner's inquest into the death of a seven-year-old Toronto girl killed by her legal guardians is hearing from a former child welfare worker who received two calls about her.

    Katelynn Sampson Inquest Hears From CAS Worker Who Received Calls About Her

    More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose

    More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose
    The new interim Conservative leader is promising to change the party's tone, but Rona Ambrose was not as willing Wednesday to say she would abandon the practice of using cultural wedge issues as a political tactic.

    More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose

    RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January

    RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January
    A hearing on alleged violations of the Canada Labour Code by the RCMP related to the force's response to a deadly shooting rampage last year in Moncton, N.B., has been adjourned until next year.

    RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January

    Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO

    Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO
    Canada's budget watchdog says a series of improvements to benefits for veterans, introduced in the waning days of the Harper government, will likely cost the federal treasury $231.6 million over the next decade.

    Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO