Case against 2 men accused in Jeanenne Fontaine's death hinges on robbery argument, lawyers say - Action News
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Case against 2 men accused in Jeanenne Fontaine's death hinges on robbery argument, lawyers say

Whether or not two men accused of manslaughter in the death of Jeannene Fontaine are guilty hinges on whether they went to her house to commit a robbery, lawyers said during closing arguments at the trial of the men on Wednesday.

Closing arguments in trial for Christopher Brass and Jason Meilleur presented Wednesday

Jeanenne Fontaine was 29 years old when she was killed in March 2017. Closing arguments were heard Wednesday in the trial for two men charged with manslaughter in connection with her death. (ObitTree)

Whether or not two men accused of manslaughter in the death of Jeanenne Fontaine are guilty hinges on whether they went to her house to commit a robbery, lawyers said during closing arguments in a Winnipeg courtroom on Wednesday.

Christopher Brass and Jason Meilleur are charged with manslaughter in connection with the death of Jeanenne Fontaine.

Fontaine, a cousin of Tina Fontaine whose 2014 killing sparked calls for a national inquiry on missing and murdered Indigenous womenwas killed in2017.

Jeanenne was shot in the back of the head inside her home on Winnipeg's Aberdeen Avenue, near Salter Street, on March 14, 2017. The house was then set on fire.

Brass and Meilleurhave both pleaded not guilty to the manslaughter charge.

Over the course of the week-and-a-half-long Court of Queen's Bench trial, a jury was told that Brass and Meilleur went to Fontaine's home with a third man, Malcolm Miles Mitchell, to collect a drug debt from the victim's boyfriend.

This photo was shown on Jan. 7, 2019, at the trial for two men accused of manslaughter in connection with the death of Jeanenne Fontaine. It shows the aftermath of an Aberdeen Avenue house fire. Fontaine was shot in the house, which was then set on fire on March 14, 2017. (Court exhibit)

But when they found the boyfriend,Monte Bull, wasn't there, the men decided to rob Fontaineinstead, Crown prosecutors alleged.

The jury was told during the course of the trialthat Mitchell was the shooter.

At issue inBrass and Meilleur's trial is whether they went to the home with Mitchell to commit a robbery, and knew or ought to have known that could lead to serious harm for the victim, the jury was told Wednesday.

Crown prosecutor Michael Desautels said that testimony from the victim's brother, Vincent "Chuck" Fontaine, proved Brass and Meilleur had that intent.

Vincenttold the jury that he saw the men come into the home where he lived with Jeanenne with a gun and a knife, and that Brass was standing watch by the door.

Desautels also pointed to testimony from Bull, who said that he owed Meilleur's girlfriend money.

As well, there were inconsistences in Meilleur's statement to police, the Crown prosecutor said. At one point, Meilleur said he was outside the house when Fontaine was shot, but at another, he said he was inside.

Robbery evidence circumstantial:defence

But defence lawyers argued that the Crown's evidence was circumstantial, and that they had failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Brass and Meilleur went to the house with Mitchell to rob Fontaine.

Meilleur's lawyer, Theodore Mariash, pointed out that Vincent Fontainetestified that one of the men took his phone, and then gave it back to him.

"Why would someone with the intent to steal property return the phone to his victim?"Mariash asked."Smartphones are valuable property."

He also noted that Vincent said hewas on the couch while the three men went through the house, looking for Bull.

Given Vincent's long criminal record, Mariashargued that hewould have known if he was being robbed, and wouldn't have been passivelysittingin his living room in that situation.

Brass's lawyer, Tara Walker, latersaid that Vincent Fontaine testifiedhe didn't hear the three men demand property or money.

The jury is set to be charged Thursday, after which they will deliberate their verdict.

The trial,before Justice Gerald Chartier, began on Jan. 7.