Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Three Men Accused Of Murdering B.C. Gangster Jonathan Bacon Plead Not Guilty In Fatal Shooting

The Canadian Press, 30 May, 2017 10:57 AM
    KELOWNA, B.C. — Three men accused in the brazen shooting death of gangster Jonathan Bacon have pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in a Kelowna, B.C., court.
     
     
    Jason McBride, Michael Jones and Jujhar Khun-Khun also pleaded not guilty in B.C. Supreme Court on Monday to attempted murder charges and gun offences.
     
    Crown prosecutor David Ruse said in his opening statement that the trio were carrying out a revenge killing when Bacon, a member of the Red Scorpion gang, was killed in a spray of bullets outside a Kelowna hotel in August 2011.
     
    Three others were injured and one person escaped serious harm.
     
    Ruse said another alleged gangster ordered the killings of two of Bacon's associates in the same vehicle, who he blamed for the 2010 death of his brother.
     
     
    Court also heard on Monday from Const. Jennifer Hunter with Kelowna RCMP, who was the first police officer to respond to the fatal shooting.
     
    Hunter said she arrived to find "chaos" and "pandemonium," with people running and screaming.
     
    The officer testified that she called dispatch asking for emergency response and reporting four people had been shot.
     
    Defence lawyers for McBride, Jones and Khun-Khun have applied for a stay of the proceedings based on long delays in getting the men to trial. 
     
    The application stems from a Supreme Court of Canada ruling that said Superior Court trials should be wrapped up in 30 months from when charges were laid.
     
    The three men were arrested and charged in February 2013 and a trial originally scheduled to begin in April 2016 was delayed several times.
     
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Allan Betton said he expects to have a decision early next week on whether the charges should be tossed, but ordered the judge-alone trial to begin in the meantime. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Body Found By Abbotsford Police Identified As 24-Year-Old Mission Resident

    Body Found By Abbotsford Police Identified As 24-Year-Old Mission Resident
    When police arrived, a deceased male victim was located and appeared to have succumbed to injuries consistent with foul play. 

    Body Found By Abbotsford Police Identified As 24-Year-Old Mission Resident

    Ontario Man Found Safe In B.C. After Spending A Night In The Bush

    Ontario Man Found Safe In B.C. After Spending A Night In The Bush
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — An Ontario man is in good condition after spending the night lost in the bush east of Kamloops, B.C.

    Ontario Man Found Safe In B.C. After Spending A Night In The Bush

    Dalai Lama Describes Himself As 'Son Of India'

    Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama on Friday described himself as a “son of India” and hailed the secularism prevailing in the country.

    Dalai Lama Describes Himself As 'Son Of India'

    Our Fight Is Not For Kashmir, It’s For Islam: Hizbul Commander In New Video

    Our Fight Is Not For Kashmir, It’s For Islam: Hizbul Commander In New Video
    Top Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) commander Zakir Rashid Bhat has purportedly come out with a new video where he is heard saying the militancy should not aim to create a new nation of Kashmir but for the supremacy of Islam.

    Our Fight Is Not For Kashmir, It’s For Islam: Hizbul Commander In New Video

    B.C. Woman Acquitted Of Counselling Distraught Husband To Commit Suicide

    B.C. Woman Acquitted Of Counselling Distraught Husband To Commit Suicide
    A woman accused of counselling her husband to commit suicide has been acquitted by a provincial court judge in Cranbrook, B.C.

    B.C. Woman Acquitted Of Counselling Distraught Husband To Commit Suicide

    Halifax Police Chief Takes Part In Heated Debate Over Street Checks

    Halifax Police Chief Takes Part In Heated Debate Over Street Checks
    HALIFAX — Marcus James said he's been arrested three times while locking up the library where he works in Halifax's historically black north end — twice by police officers he had trained about diversity.

    Halifax Police Chief Takes Part In Heated Debate Over Street Checks