Pickton Trial

Defence Plods On

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It's not entirely clear where defence is heading.


Lorne Loewen spoke of "people coming in and out, sort of undesirable people, coming in cars trying to sell you something or looking for Willie." '
By Citizen Correspondent Trisha Baptie
Date Posted: 09/20/07
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With the Defence still presenting it's case in Courtroom 102 in New Westminster, it is still a bit foggy as to where exactly they are headed with their case. However, it's not my job to figure it out - it's the jury's job, and for that fact alone, I do not envy them.

The trial hit a slow patch this week due to a sick juror and legal wrangles between lawyers, but we did hear from Sandy Humeny, Robert Pickton's ex-sister-in-law, who described Pickton as linguistically very plain.

She said a conversation with him required no big words or anything above his very minimal vocabulary level. This diminished capacity to understand seemed to even get in the way of him fully understanding what it meant to be diagnosed with Hepatitis C back in 1999.

Sandy said she moved on to the property in 1973 and lived there for five years, having two children with Dave Pickton - a boy and girl. Even after she and Dave broke up, she would be around because of her involvement with the various businesses they ran.

This week we also heard from a neighbor of Pickton's, Cameron Grant, who has lived on his farm since 1970. He testified there was always a lot of activity on the farm, which he drove by usually very early when he returned from moving bees, which he kept on his property. He stated he never saw anything unusual going on at the Pickton property at that time.

Also on the stand this week was Lorne Loewen, who has worked for Dave Pickton since 1996. Loewen talked at length about his job with the top soil business, and spoke to the fact that he started each work day around 6 a.m. by knocking on Pickton's trailer. He said the two would chat while he was picking up his first order of the day and would be in and out of the trailer throughout the day as he picked up orders.


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    Comments

    Thanks for the update, I

    By Margaret Holborow, September 23, 2007 at 01:40

    Thanks for the update, I always look forward to your trial stories. Even those tedious bits broken down make for fascinating reading and absorbing. Tedium but riveting and with it always brings that "surreal aspect to it, how could this happen".
    Well done

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