Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Nova Scotia

Woman who murdered Loretta Saunders loses appeal

There were whoops of joy, applause and profane threats, moments after the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal rejected a bid by Victoria Henneberry to withdraw her guilty plea for second-degree murder.

Victoria Henneberry asked province's highest court to overturn second-degree murder conviction

The appeal of Victoria Henneberry, left, was dismissed by Nova Scotia's highest court Thursday. Henneberry pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the death of Labrador's Loretta Saunders, right, back in 2014. (Nova Scotia Court of Appeal/GoFundMe)

There were whoops of joy, applause and profane threatsmoments after the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal rejected a bid by VictoriaHenneberryto withdraw her guilty plea on a charge of second-degree murder.

Henneberrywas convicted in the February2014 murder ofLorettaSaunders, a 26-year-oldInukwoman from Labrador.

Henneberryand her boyfriend killed Saunders in the Halifax apartment she was subletting to them. They killed herrather than pay her the $430 they owed for rent.

Members of the Saunders family and their supporters packed the courtroom for the two-day appeal hearing. They were the ones who shattered the normally quiet reserve of the province's highest court, voicing their relief at the decision and their disdain forHenneberry. They shouted threats at her as sheriff's deputies hustled her from the courtroom.

The three-member appeal panel deliberated for only a few minutes before deciding unanimously to dismiss her appeal. They promised reasons for their decision would come later.

'I became someone else'

Henneberryargued she wasn't in her right mind when she pleaded guilty to murder and she should be allowed to withdraw that plea. In her supporting documents,Henneberrysuggested the court should substitute a conviction on the much lesser charge of being an accessory to murder after the fact. But the court told her that if her appeal was successful, she would instead likely face a new trial on the original charge of first degree murder.

In her closing arguments,Henneberrytalked of her state of mind at the time of the murder. She described the 14 months she spent in jail awaiting trial as traumatic.

"I was harassed, bullied, threatened, hypervigilant. I could never relax. I was always in a state of distress that affected my very persona,"Henneberrysaid.

"I had trouble sleeping, focusing, I completely shut down. It was as though I became someone else."

She complained she felt like she was in a dream-like state in the courtroom because she hadn't received her medications. However, the crown questioned whether there was a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder, asHenneberryclaimed. She had been repeatedly assessed and the only evidence she produced to support her position was a handwritten note from a psychiatrist who had done a preliminary interview with her.

Loretta Saunders' mother, Miriam Saunders said she plans to devote her time to the issue of missing and murdered indigenous women. (CBC)

Saunders' family relieved

Loretta's mother Miriam Saunders expressed relief outside the courtroommoments after the decision was announced.

"I've been praying on it and I was ready to accept what they had done because I left it to the Lord and my daughter's soul," Miriam Saunders said.

She said now that the appeal is over, she is going to devote her time and energy to the cause of missing and murdered indigenous women.

The CBC's Blair Rhodes livebloggedfrom the hearing.