Defence urges jury to find man guilty of manslaughter if it believes confession
VANCOUVER — Jurors tasked with deciding the fate of a man charged with the first-degree murder of a 12-year-old British Columbia girl could make a finding of manslaughter even if they accept an alleged confession, a defence lawyer says.
Patrick Angly told jurors in final submissions in B.C. Supreme Court on Tuesday that they could conclude Garry Handlen snapped but didn’t intend to kill Monica Jack in May 1978.
He said the confession Handlen made to an undercover officer in November 2014 can’t be verified as accurate.
The trial heard Handlen said during a so-called Mr. Big sting that he spoke with Monica Jack at a pullout on a highway in Merritt, forced her into the bathroom of his camper and drove up a hill where he sexually assaulted and strangled her before burning her clothes and putting her body behind a log.