Evidence concludes at Kalen Schlatter murder trial amid coronavirus concerns - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 02:44 AM | Calgary | 6.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Evidence concludes at Kalen Schlatter murder trial amid coronavirus concerns

The jury has now heard all of the evidence at Kalen Schlatter's first-degree murder trial in the death of Toronto woman Tess Richey.

Jury deliberations expected to begin next week

A man smiles looking downward.
Kalen Schlatter has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder. (Facebook)

The jury has now heard all of the evidence at Kalen Schlatter's first-degree murder trial in the death of Toronto woman Tess Richey.

Now, with concerns growing across the provinceover the spreadof COVID-19, it's expected the jury will begin its deliberations at the end of next week.

Before excusing the jury for the day Friday,Superior Court JusticeMichael Dambrotsaid the court will do everything possible to keep people safe, including providing taxi rides to and from court for any jurors who need them.

"We're going to do our best to keep you all healthy," Dambrot said.

Schlatter's trial is winding down just as the Superior Court of Justice cancelled jury panels for any upcoming criminal and civil trials. Jury trials that are already underway will continue.

"This is a precautionary measure to keep the public, court users and staff safe," said Jenessa Crognali, a spokespersonfor Ontario's Attorney General, in a statement.

Schlatter's defence team called its final witness Friday morning a private investigator namedJames Marlow.

He provided photo and video evidence of the area near where Richey's body was discovered.

TheCrown alleges Schlatter sexually assaulted and then strangled Richey before leaving her body at the bottom of an outdoor stairwell in the city's gay village in 2017.

Schlatter, 23,has pleaded not guilty in connection withthe 22-year-old woman's death.

The jury has seen security camera footageof Schlatter and Richey together in the early morning hours of Nov. 25.

Tess Richey is seen in this undated photo provided by her sister, Rachel. (Rachel Richey)

Thatincludesvideo showing the pair walking up adriveway to the outdoor stairwell where her body was later discovered at 582 Church St.,before Schlatteremergesalone about 45 minutes later, headingback the way they came.

On Friday, Marlowshowed a video he shot of a fence behind that location. This came just after testimony from a man the defence presented as an alternate suspect.

The video showedJessyca Greenwood, one of Schlatter's lawyers, climbing over the fence, before another man did the same thing. The Crown objected to its relevance, as the video was shot years after Richey's body was found.

Some people in the body of the court laughed out loud at the video, while Richey's family looked on, incredulous.

Dambrot cautioned the members of the jury that they have no evidence to show that the fence was in the same position it was back in 2017, so the had to be carefulabout how they consider it when deliberating.

Closing statements from the defence and the Crown are set to happen on Monday and Tuesday, with Dambrot's charge to the jury slated to happen on Friday.

Once the charge is finished, the jury would then begin its deliberations.

adam.carter@cbc.ca