Heart of darkness: the jury finds Bernardo guilty of first-degree murder
Article Abstract:
Bernardo was given two life sentences for the brutal killings of two teenage girls in St. Catharines, Ontario. He also faces charges of sexual assault and manslaughter of other girls. His ex-wife, Karla Homolka, who committed some of the crimes with Bernardo, testified at the trial.
Publication Name: Maclean's
Subject: News, opinion and commentary
ISSN: 0024-9262
Year: 1995
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Judging Bernardo: the search for 12 impartial jurors begins
Article Abstract:
Patrick LeSage, the judge in Bernardo's murder case, faces the difficult task of making sure Bernardo's jury is impartial. The case involves the sex killings of two school girls, and should draw huge media coverage. The jury will be selected from 1,500 candidates in Toronto.
Publication Name: Maclean's
Subject: News, opinion and commentary
ISSN: 0024-9262
Year: 1995
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Home-town horrors: a double-murder reopens a city's wounds
Article Abstract:
A house in the Port Dalhousie community of St. Catharines, Ontario, was the site of what promises to become one of Canada's most notorious murders. There, Paul Bernardo allegedly raped, murdered and dismembered two teenage girls, Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy.
Publication Name: Maclean's
Subject: News, opinion and commentary
ISSN: 0024-9262
Year: 1995
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Politics of dying. Mortgage crisis: elderly, rural and minority borrowers are easy targets
- Abstracts: The fiscal facts. Steady as she goes: the next federal budget will offer little tax relief. The budget balance: Marcel Masse says Ottawa must walk a delicate line
- Abstracts: The two faces of Karla Homolka. Fateful obsession: Paul Bernardo's lawyer accuses Karla Homolka of killing two girls
- Abstracts: Spanking on trial: should parents ever strike their children? Mightily cheesed off: a proposal to ban raw-milk cheese draws scorn