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Calgary

Edward Downey guilty of murdering Calgary girl, 5, and her mother

A Calgary jury has convicted Edward Downey of two counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of Sara Baillie and her five-year-old daughter, Taliyah Marsman.

WARNING: This story contains disturbing and graphic details

This photo of Edward Downey was sent to a woman he was trying to date between July 10 and July 13, 2016. A Calgary jury found him guilty on Wednesday in the first-degree murder of Sara Baillie and her five-year-old daughter, Taliyah Marsman. (Court exhibit)

A Calgary jury has convicted Edward Downey of two counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of SaraBaillieand her five-year-old daughter,TaliyahMarsman.

The mother and daughter were killedon July 11, 2016.

The Crown arguedBailliewas killed because Downey, 48, blamed her for his deteriorating relationship with his girlfriend and thatTaliyahwas murdered because she likely would have been able to identify him as her mother's killer.

Baillie and Taliyah both died by asphyxiation in July 2016. (Facebook)

Following thethree-week trial, it took the sequestered jury less than three hours to make their deliberations.

Clapping, cheering and crying from the victims' family and friends was heard as the verdict was read.

Downey looked straight ahead as the verdict was read and showed no emotion.

Following the verdict, 11 of the 12 jurorsrecommended Downey face a consecutive 50-year parole ineligibility, with one juror making no recommendation.

Court of Queen's BenchJustice Beth Hughes thanked the jurors for serving their community, and family members of the victims shouted "thank you" and clapped as they left the courtroom.

'Saradied trying to help her friend'

Baillie'smother, Janet Fredette, read an emotional statement following the verdict.

She thanked the pressfor giving the family privacy throughout the trial,police for their work on the investigation, victim services for their support, and Crown prosecutors for the verdict.

"It has been a long two-and-a-half years to get to this moment in time," Fredettesaid, withher family standing behind her.

Janet Fredette, Sara Baillie's mother and Taliyah Marsman's grandmother, said the family is happy with the outcome of the trial that found Edward Downey guilty of two counts of first-degree murder. (Anis Heydari/CBC)

"We are most pleased with the outcome of the trial and we are sure justice will be servedNow I can go home and bury Sara andTaliyah's ashes and let them rest in peace.

"Our hope is that in time, and little by little, this powerful love we feel for the girls will gradually take up more and more space in our minds each and every day, that pictures and songs of the happier times will settle on us and drive out the darkness that has become part of our daily lives for the most recent past."

Fredette said the result is proof the system works.

"Sara died trying to help her friend out of a bad situation. She is a hero," she said.

"Sara's death ensures no other individual will be harmed by Mr. Downey."

Prosecution's theory

The judge had instructed the jury to make a decision on a "rational and fair consideration of all the evidence."

According to the prosecution, Downey hatedBailliebecause she had influenced her best friend a woman who can only be identified as AB who was dating Downey at the time. AB had refused to work as an escort for Downey, who has a history of pimping out his girlfriends.

Their relationship had deterioratedand one day before the killingsAB texted Downey telling him to pack his bags.

Text messages from Downey to his then-girlfriend in the month before the deaths showed he dislikedBaillie, calling her "disrespectful" and expressing anger that AB was spending time with her.

Prosecutor CarlaMacPhailtold jurors the Crown's theory is Downey showed up atBaillie'sapartment on that morning and killed her by wrapping her face in duct tape and then strangling her. He then stuffedher body in a laundry hamper.

Baillie'sbody was discovered hours later in her daughter's bedroom closet.Two of Downey's fingerprints were on the duct tape wrapped around her face, neck and wrists, according to evidence presented during the trial.

But Downey testified in his own defence, and while he admitted to being inBaillie'sapartment on the morning of the killings, he told defence lawyer GavinWolchhe was there with acquaintances to make a drug deal. Downey said he knew one of the men as Terrance but couldn't remember the name of the other.

'Patently absurd'

While in the apartment, Downey said,Baillieput her daughter in a bedroom and then got into an argument with Terrance in another room. When Terrance called out for duct tape, the unnamed friend threw him the roll and he ripped off a piece, he testified. When he handed it to Terrance,Bailliedidn't say a word, according to Downey.

Heleft the two men in the apartment, drove home and then returned to find the pair outside waiting for him, he testified.

The Crown told jurors Downey invented the two men and called his version of events "patently absurd."


Evidence from Downey's cellphone puthim atBaillie'shome during the time period when she was killed and in the rural area near whereTaliyah'sbody was recovered later that same day.

Downey said he was to meet Terrance and the other man at a northeast location but then decided to keep driving east instead, which is how he explained his cellphone pinging off towers near where the child's body was dumped.

All the while, Downey was text messaging with a new love interest.MacPhailsuggested that when their conversation ceased for five minutes it was because Downey was dumpingTaliyah'sbody in a stand of bushes.

Emotions boiling over

Family members of thevictims, includingTaliyah'sfather, ColinMarsman, packed into the courtroom every day to bear witness to the difficult evidence, often unable to hold in their horror, sometimes gasping and sobbing as gruesome details were revealed.

Downey's mother has also been in the gallery throughout the trial. She was late returning to the courtroom to hear the verdict, entering shortly after it was announced.

The judge and sheriff warned those in the courtroom to be respectful as emotions boiled over following the verdict, with one person telling Downey, "you'll rot in there."

A first-degree murder conviction comes with an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.

His sentencing date will be set on Jan. 15, and victim impact statements will be heard during sentencing.

With files from The Canadian Press