B.C. judge rejects bid to throw out conviction for 13-year-old girl’s murder

A B.C. Supreme Court judge has rejected an application to throw out a first-degree murder conviction for what the defence says were unreasonable delays in the trial process.

Justice Lance Bernard made the ruling, with reasons to follow, moments after defence lawyer Kevin McCullough made his final rebuttal in the application that could have seen Ibrahim Ali go free.

A jury found Ali guilty on Dec. 8 of first-degree murder in the death of a 13-year-old girl whose body was found in Burnaby’s Central Park in July 2017.

McCullough had filed the so-called Jordan application on the grounds that too much time had passed between his client being charged and the trial concluding, a limit the Supreme Court of Canada has set at 30 months.

He said his client had been in custody for 63 months, more than double the limit.

But Crown lawyer Daniel Porte blamed the delays mostly on the defence and “discrete exceptional events,” including the COVID-19 pandemic. 

He said if those events were subtracted, it would have only taken about 25 months to conclude the trial, which is within the High Court’s threshold.

More to come.

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Posted in CBC