Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Trial Over Infant Remains In Storage Locker Could Hinge On Experts: Lawyer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Apr, 2016 12:03 PM
    WINNIPEG — A lawyer for a woman charged with concealing the remains of six infants in a storage locker says her upcoming trial is likely to hinge on whether the babies were born alive. 
     
    Andrea Giesbrecht's trial before a judge alone is to begin Monday. She was arrested in October 2014 shortly after the remains were discovered, but she has been on bail for a year.
     
    Despite numerous pre-trial hearings, the ages of the infants or a reason for why they were put in the storage locker has never been revealed.
     
    Greg Brodsky, Giesbrecht's lawyer, says the trial will probably be lengthy, since it will depend a great deal on the testimony of forensic pathologists and forensic anthropologists. The Crown has to "establish that they were live births," he says.
     
    "That's a difficult problem. That's the reason for so many pathologists."
     
    If the babies were not born alive, Brodsky will "argue about whether there should be a conviction or not."
     
    "We're making certain challenges to the quality of the evidence and the interpretation to be taken from the evidence," he says. "It is an unusual case."
     
    Court has already heard that police officers were called to a Winnipeg U-Haul facility after employees entered a locker to take inventory because the bill hadn't been paid. A police report read out in court said employees smelled a strong odour and saw "squishy bags."
     
    Officers found bodies wrapped in garbage bags and placed in a duffle bag, a tote bag and plastic containers. One body was wrapped in a towel, as well as a garbage bag, and stored in a pail. One officer managed to pry open one container and saw "limbs that belonged to an infant."
     
    The trial will deal with why the remains were kept in the first place, Brodsky says.
     
    "The concealment is another issue. What was the purpose of maintaining the products of conception in the fashion that they were?"
     
    That question has never been answered.
     
    Court records indicate that Giesbrecht, who has also gone by the name Andrea Naworynski, is a gambling addict who had a low-paying job at a fast-food restaurant.
     
    She has a history of unrelated fraud charges. Giesbrecht pleaded guilty earlier this year to failing to comply with a probation order and fraud over $5,000. She admitted to defrauding Manitoba's Employment and Income Assistance and going to a casino in defiance of a probation order from a previous fraud conviction.
     
    Before that, Giesbrecht was given a suspended sentence and two years of probation after pleading guilty to fraud for borrowing money from a 73-year-old neighbour and repaying her with bounced cheques.
     
    Giesbrecht — whom Brodsky once described as "baffled" by the concealment charges — is keen for the trial to proceed, he says.
     
    "She's happy that the matter is finally coming to fruition. She's unhappy that it's going to take so long."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Premier To Outline Plan To Deal With Economic Downturn In TV Address

    Alberta Premier To Outline Plan To Deal With Economic Downturn In TV Address
    EDMONTON — One week before her government is to introduce its budget, Premier Rachel Notley is to deliver a 15-minute talk on TV about the economic challenges facing Alberta families. 

    Alberta Premier To Outline Plan To Deal With Economic Downturn In TV Address

    Man Shot By Police During Intervention In Northern Quebec Community Dies

    Provincial police say the 25-year-old man passed away late Wednesday after the incident in Lac-Simon, northwest of Montreal.

    Man Shot By Police During Intervention In Northern Quebec Community Dies

    Trudeau To Visit Resource-rich Northern Ontario To Talk Infrastructure

    SUDBURY, Ont. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau heads to northern Ontario today as he continues to talk up his government's infrastructure spending plans.

    Trudeau To Visit Resource-rich Northern Ontario To Talk Infrastructure

    Ottawa To Spend $30 Million On Helping Quebec Homeowners Who Have Pyrrhotite

    Ottawa To Spend $30 Million On Helping Quebec Homeowners Who Have Pyrrhotite
      He made the announcement after visiting a residence in Trois-Rivieres, where pyrrhotite is a problem in possibly several thousand houses.

    Ottawa To Spend $30 Million On Helping Quebec Homeowners Who Have Pyrrhotite

    Stephane Dion Says Aung San Suu Kyi 'De Facto' Leader Of Myanmar

    Stephane Dion Says Aung San Suu Kyi 'De Facto' Leader Of Myanmar
    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion says he considers Aung San Suu Kyi to be Myanmar's de facto leader, noting she is bound by a "strange rule" in her country's constitution.

    Stephane Dion Says Aung San Suu Kyi 'De Facto' Leader Of Myanmar

    Lawyer Proposing Cold-FX Class Action Is 'Manufacturing' Case, Says Drug Maker

    Lawyer Proposing Cold-FX Class Action Is 'Manufacturing' Case, Says Drug Maker
    VANCOUVER — The lawyer pushing for a class-action lawsuit over the alleged shortcomings of a popular cold and flu remedy is manufacturing a case with no real complainants, a court has heard.

    Lawyer Proposing Cold-FX Class Action Is 'Manufacturing' Case, Says Drug Maker