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Saskatoon

Greg Fertuck appealing 1st-degree murder conviction

Convicted killer Greg Fertuck is taking his case to the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal.

Papers filed with Saskatchewan Court of Appeal on July 26

man and woman
Greg Fertuck told undercover police officers he dumped his wife Sheree's body in a rural area near where he hunted deer, according to testimony from one of the officers at Fertuck's first-degree murder trial. (Greg Fertuck/Facebook)

Greg Fertuck is appealing his first-degree murder conviction.

"The Trial Judge did not properly consider the evidence and only listened to the Crown's argument," Fertuck wrote in the appeal application.

Justice Richard Danyliuk convicted Fertuckon June 14 at Saskatoon Court of King's Bench of killing his estranged wife Shereeand then disposing of her body. Sheree disappeared in December 2015.

Fertuck is requesting a retrial by judge and jury.

The first-degree murder conviction meantFertuck was given an automatic life sentencewith no eligibility of parole for 25 years. With time served, Fertuck couldapply for parole in 20 years, when he's 90 years old.

Danyliuk also gaveFertuck a four-year sentence that shall "run concurrently to his life imprisonment"forindecently interfering with Sheree's remains.

She has not been seen since disappearing.

Danyliuk ruled that Fertuck went out to the gravel pit that afternoon of Dec. 7, 2015, got into a confrontation with Sheree, shot her twice, then loaded her body in his truck and dumped her in a rural area.

This is the scenario that Greg presented to undercover police posing as criminals in a sting operation years after Sheree disappeared. He later recanted that story, saying he made it up because he was enticed by money and perks from the fictitious criminal organization the officers were pretending to be a part of.

Sheree Fertuck's disappearance, the ensuing investigation and Greg Fertuck's trial are the focus of the CBC podcast The Pit.Listen to all the episodes here.