Former Sask. Mountie who shot lover found guilty of manslaughter - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Former Sask. Mountie who shot lover found guilty of manslaughter

A former Saskatchewan Mountie on trial for murder in the shooting death of his lover has been found guilty of manslaughter.

Bernie Herman had pleaded not guilty to 1st-degree murder in death of Braden Herman

A man a winter jacket is escorted out of a courthouse by a sheriff.
Prosecutor Jennifer Schmidt said during the trial's closing arguments that testimony from Bernie Herman, pictured, about not being able to remember what happened cannot be believed. (Liam Richards/The Canadian Press)

Family and friends of a Saskatchewan man who was shot to death by his lover gasped and cried after a judge found the Mountie guilty of manslaughter.

Bernie Herman, 55, had pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of 26-year-old Braden Herman. The two men are not related.

Court of King's Bench Justice Gary Meschishnick said in his decision Thursday that he didn't believe the officer was acting in self-defence or that he had no memory of shooting the gun.

But Meschishnick said the Crown had not proven the officer was not provoked.

"We feel that it's very unfair," said Rochelle Herman, who was friends with Braden Herman.

Family and friends wore buttons bearing the young man's face. June Hanson said Braden Herman didn't get a voice in the December trial and deserved justice.

WATCH|Friend of victim disappointed by verdict:

Friend of victim disappointed by verdict for former Mountie found guilty of manslaughter in shooting death

8 months ago
Duration 0:28
June Hanson, a friend of Braden Herman, speaks to media outside the Court of Kings Bench in Prince Albert, Sask. after former Saskatchewan Mountie Bernie Herman was found guilty of manslaughter in the shooting death of Braden. She says he should have been found guilty of first-degree murder.

Braden Herman's naked body was found in 2021 in a park on the outskirts of Prince Albert. Bernie Herman testified that he fired the gun that killed the younger man but lawyers disagreed on whether it was planned.

The officer's lawyers said the shooting was in self-defence. Prosecutors argued the Mountie deliberately lured his lover to the isolated area to kill him.

Family members have said Braden Herman was a gentle giant. His early years were unstable and difficult,but he was adopted to a close family member and mostly raised in the Clearwater River Dene Nation near La Loche, Sask.

His twin brother died by suicide in 2015 and that deeply affected him, family have said.

The trial in December heard thatBraden Herman and the officer met on Facebook in about 2018. Soon after, the Mountie invited the younger man to move into the officer's family home.

The relationship became sexual and the Mountie began sleeping in the basement bedroom with Braden Herman.

Bernie Herman's daughter described the men's relationship as weird. She told court they'd hold hands and sit closely together on the couch.

The relationship had an impact on the Mountie's marriage. The officer's wife, Janice Herman, kicked the younger man out of the home in 2019, but the two men continued to have sex.

Bernie Herman told the trial the sex wasn't always consensual. The officer said he was afraid because the young man would get violent.

Prosecutors said Bernie Herman's testimony wasn't credible, as the officer continued to seek out the younger man.

Messages shown in court suggest there was love, affection and desire between the two men, but there was also frustration. Court saw messages where Braden Herman told the Mountie to be more open and accepting of himself.

As the men's relationship continued, it deepened fractures in the Mountie's marriage. Messages between Janice Herman and her husband show years of conflict and anger.

"When you were having the time of your life in our basement, I was upstairs crying," she said in a message two weeks before the killing.

The Mountie was at an RCMP all-terrain vehicle training course on May 11, 2021 the day of the killing but called Braden Herman 59 times.

Later that day, wearing his uniform, duty belt and RCMP-issued weapon, Bernie Herman picked up the younger man. They got coffee and the officer performed a sexual act on Braden Herman in a Dairy Queen drive-thru.

The Mountie testifiedthat they then drove to the isolated area and Braden Herman grabbed him by the face.

Bernie Herman said the younger man, who was naked, walked to the back of the passenger side of the truck and bent down to grab an object.

The Mountie testified he doesn't remember what happened next, but his gun went off.

The judge wrote in his decision that he doesn't believe Bernie Herman's testimony that he has memory gaps, that he felt threatened or that he had no intent to cause the death of the younger man.

But the judge said he has a reasonable doubt "that the Crown has proven that he was not provoked into acting as he did."

Meschishnick wrote that Bernie Herman was feeling trapped in an abusive relationship that was also causing his wife to drink. The judge wrote that in those circumstances, the threat of a possible assault could make an ordinary person lose "the power of self control."

Bernie Herman sent a text to his wife soon after the killingsaying, "Just so you know your life has changed from here on. I just shot and killed him."

Friends said they wanted a first-degree murder verdict, adding Braden Herman wasn't violent and Bernie Herman's excuses didn't add up.

"Why did [Bernie Herman]leave that day with his gun. Why did he pick up [Braden Herman]if he was so afraid?" Hanson said.

A killing must have been planned and deliberate for a first-degree murder conviction.

Bernie Herman, who had been free on bail, was put in custody following the verdict. He will be sentenced at a later date.

"At least he's in custody now. He's not gallivanting all over the city like nothing happened, [like]he didn't take a life," Hanson said.

"Bernie lived his life. Braden didn't. Braden just started his life."