'Is that funny?': Accused killer clashes with prosecutor at murder trial - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:38 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British ColumbiaVideo

'Is that funny?': Accused killer clashes with prosecutor at murder trial

A killer's chuckle led to a tense moment of confrontation Wednesday between a Crown prosecutor and a man on trial for slaughtering two people in their Vancouver home.

Killer claims he doesn't know why he was at the home of couple he slaughtered in cold blood

Rocky Rambo Wei Nam Kam was questioned by police in the hours after his arrest. He has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder. (B.C. Supreme Court)

A killer's chuckle led to a tense moment of confrontation Wednesday between a Crown prosecutor and a man on trial for slaughtering two people in their Vancouver home.

Seconds after prosecutor Daniel Mulligan pointed out that despite Rocky Rambo Wei Nam Kam'sclaim he had no plans to kill anyone on the evening of Sept. 26, 2017 the 29-year-old left his home with a backpack containing two knives, a hatchet, gloves and a baseball hat.

"And shampoo," Kam added, his smile turning into a grin as Mulligan began to ask another question.

The prosecutor stopped speaking.

"Is that funny?" Mulligan asked Kam.

"It's not funny," Kam replied.

But he said he couldn't understand why Mulligan seemed unable to accept his insistence he didn't know exactly why he found himself in possession of tools used to commit two killings.

"You can see that that would be pretty annoying when you suggest otherwise," Kamsaid.

"Well they're items that you used to kill two people," Mulligan replied."That's why I'm suggesting it."

'I don't know why I killed'

The exchange came on the last of the three days Kam spent under cross-examination, capturing the dissonance between a prosecutor bent on proving two charges of first-degree murder and a defendant who admits killing Dianna Mah-Jones and Richard Jones but insists he never intended to do so.

At one point Mulligan asked Kam why he decided not to kill another woman also a stranger who he saw on the street immediately after leaving the Jones' house.

"Why is your DNA on this knife?": Watch as police interrogate Kam

'You're an animal': Police interrogate accused killer Rocky Rambo Wei Nam Kam

4 years ago
Duration 2:00
Raw surveillance video shows police trying to get answers from Rocky Rambo Wei Nam Kam who is accused of stabbing a couple to death in their home in 2017

Kam struggled to explain the difference.

"I don't know why I killed Mr. and Mrs. Jones," he said."I don't know why I didn't kill the woman who just walked by."

Kam's defence lawyer plans to argue that his client was under the spell of a mental disorder that left him believing that he was functioning inside a violent video game when he killed 64-year-old Mah-Jones and 68-year-old Jones.

Originally from Hong Kong, Kam moved to Calgary with his family before arriving in the Lower Mainland months before the killings. He claimed to have spent between 12 and 14 hours a day playing online video games and poring through internet fantasy comic books.

Battle over expert evidence

A psychologist is expected to testify about the alleged role of video games in Kam's consciousness on Friday. But the Crown intends to challenge the qualifications of the expert and the admissibility of "novel science" at the trial.

If necessary, prosecutors told Justice Laura Gerow, they will bring forward a psychiatrist of their own to rebut the evidence of the defence witness.

Rocky Rambo Wei Nam Kam has admitted to killing Dianna Mah-Jones, 64, and Richard Jones, 68, but has pleaded not guilty to first degree murder. (Airbnb.ca)

All of that testimony will happen within a voir dire a kind of trial within a trial.

One of the cases the Crown will use to make apoint about the use of "novel science" is a Supreme Court of Canada decision banning any evidence obtained through hypnosis from admissibility at criminal trials.

The second involved the exclusion of evidence purporting to determinea male subject's sexual preferences by showing him images and sounds of sexual activity, while monitoring reactions through a gauge attached to his penis.

According to Wednesday's testimony, Kam told the defence psychologist he didn't miss video games and comic books as much as he thought he would in the time since his arrest.

Mulligan also asked Kamwhether any of the video games he played depicted torturing victims, cleaning up a crime scene or changing out of bloody clothes all of which he saidKam had done.

Kam said that it might be more efficient to wear different outfits in some of the battles.

'It's just that simple'

The accused's demeanour varied little throughout his testimony.

Wearing a light grey shirt and black pants, he was escorted to the witness box by a sheriff each day, where he sat beside a translator who was only called into action a couple of times.

Although Mulligan only questioned Kam once directly about chuckling, the defendant smiled frequently andoften apologized before saying he didn't understand a question or the logic behind the prosecutor's assertions.

Rocky Rambo Wei Nam Kam is pictured in the prisoner's dock. He finished his testimony on Wednesday. (Felicity Don)

He said he had thrown out his only jeans, a hoodie and a backpack because of blood stains. But he quibbled about the suggestion that his jeans were "soaked in blood."

And he insisted that he "woke up" in Mah-Jones' Kia Sol after driving the car randomly for 13 minutes following the killings.

But Mulligan carefully noted eachof Kam's actions before and after the killings to suggest planning, accusing him of stuffing the bodies in a shower stall and turning on water to destroy DNAlinking him to the crimes.

He suggested Kam left the house by the back door to avoid detection and then workedto "cover his tracks" by taking a convoluted route through the streets nearby and then throwing away anything that might tie him to the scene.

Through it all, the killer maintained a sense ofbafflement, saying he couldn't recall specific thoughts ormemories about Mulligan's allegations.

Why, for instance, had he chosen to steal Mah-Jones' vehicle?

"When I saw the car keys, so I used the car," he said."Sadly, it's just that simple."