Jury finds father, son guilty in killing of 2 Mtis hunters - Action News
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Edmonton

Jury finds father, son guilty in killing of 2 Mtis hunters

An Edmonton jury has found an Alberta father and songuiltyin the shooting deaths of twoMtis hunters.

Anthony Bilodeau convicted on 1 count of 2nd-degree murder, 1 count of manslaughter

Alberta father, son found guilty for deaths of 2 Mtis hunters

2 years ago
Duration 1:51
An Alberta father and son have been convicted in the killings of two Mtis hunters who were shot to death after being chased by a truck.

An Edmonton jury has found an Alberta father and son guilty in the March 2020shooting deaths of two Mtis hunters.

Anthony Bilodeau, 33, was found guilty of second-degree murder Tuesday in thedeath of Maurice Cardinal, 57. Bilodeau was also found guilty of manslaughter in the death of Jacob Sansom, 39.

The jury found Bilodeau's father, Roger Bilodeau, 58, guilty of two counts of manslaughterin the deaths of Cardinal and Sansom.

The two Bilodeaus were originally each charged with two counts of second-degree murder. Bothpleaded not guilty.

Andrea Sandmaier with Metis Nation of Alberta along with family members and supporters, speak to media after a jury found two Alberta men guilty in deaths of Metis hunters Jacob Sansom and his uncle Maurice Cardinal. (The Canadian Press/Jason Franson)

The 11-person jury started deliberating late Monday after a two-week trial in Edmonton Court of Queen's Bench.

Andrea Sandmaier, a representative from the Mtis Nation of Alberta who spoke on behalf of the Sansom and Cardinal families, thanked a long list of supporters as well as the jury, the judge, and the Crown prosecution for their work "to bring justice for these senseless murders of Maurice and Jake."

"You can't even imagine the strength that this family has and what they've endured the ugly, ugly ugliness of the keyboard warriors out there," she said outside the courthouse.

"These gentlemen, Maurice and Jake, were so important to our Mtis community It's a huge loss to this family, it's a huge loss to the Metis Nation of Alberta."

Anthony Bilodeau's lawyer, Brian Beresh, said he was disappointed in the verdict.

"This was not a race-motivated situation," he said. "We think that this was a misunderstanding in rural Alberta, it wasn't about vigilantism at all."

Beresh said he believed there were "strong grounds" for an appeal that the defence would be looking at.

Second-degree murder carries a sentence of life imprisonment. Manslaughter with a firearm has a minimum sentence of four years.

Jacob Sansom's widow, Sarah Sansom, said now is a time to heal but there will never be justice.

"How do you put a time or sentence on two lives? And lives that were as significant as their lives were."

Jake Sansom (left) and Maurice Cardinal were hunting near Siebert Lake when they were shot to death in March 2020. They took this photo on the day they were killed. (Submitted by Mike Sansom)

Shecriticized media coverage of her testimony during the trial.

"Never once did I say my husband and me had problems because of his drinking," she said.

"It really bothers me that people would think that he's somebody he's not because of something I said that was turned around and twisted."

Closing arguments

Defence lawyers and the Crown prosecution delivered their closing arguments Monday.

Anthony Bilodeau's lawyerBeresh argued that his client acted out of self-defence while Roger Bilodeau's counsel, Shawn Gerstel, said that he did not intend for the night's fatal outcome and only wanted to speak with the men.

The Crown said the killings were a case of the Bilodeaus taking the law into their own hands and Sansom and Cardinal had done nothing wrong.

Court has previously heard that Sansom and Cardinal had spent March 27, 2020 moose hunting, then socializing with friends.

Roger Bilodeau and his teenage sonJoseph chased Sansom and Cardinal down seven kilometres of rural road, reaching speeds of 152 km/h, after spotting the pair's truck in their driveway and thinking it could be thieves.

During the pursuit, Bilodeau called Anthony Bilodeau and told him to bring a gun.

Soon after arriving at the scene where the other two vehicles were stopped, Anthony Bilodeau shot and killed Sansom and Cardinal.

The defence lawyers and Crown will meet to discuss dates for sentencingon June 17.