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Guilty verdict reached in trial of man accused of killing daughter in 1994

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Guilty verdict in Everton Biddersingh trial
WATCH ABOVE: After deliberating for hours, jurors found the father charged first-degree murder in the death of his daughter and leaving her body to burn in a suitcase 21 years ago guilty. Caryn Lieberman reports – Jan 7, 2016

TORONTO – A father accused of starving or drowning his teenaged daughter two decades ago was convicted of first-degree murder on Thursday after weeks of graphic and disturbing testimony about the horrific abuse she suffered before she died.

Jurors took about four hours to find an impassive Everton Biddersingh guilty, which carries a mandatory life sentence without parole for 25 years.

“On behalf of the administration of justice, I thank you for your service,” Superior Court Justice Al O’Marra told them.

O’Marra had sent them to deliberate after concluding a charge he had started a day earlier by outlining prosecution and defence positions.

The Crown maintained Biddersingh, 60, drowned or starved Melonie Biddersingh, 17, after a period of prolonged abuse, or that she died while her father unlawfully confined her in the small Toronto apartment they shared with her stepmother, Elaine Biddersingh.

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“They treated Melonie like a slave,” O’Marra told jurors in summing up the prosecution’s case. “She was imprisoned emotionally and physically.”

READ MORE: Key witnesses in death of abused teen 21 years ago had reason to lie: judge

The teen, whose charred remains were found stuffed in a suitcase in an isolated industrial area, had come to Canada from Jamaica for a better life. Instead, by the time of her death, she weighed a skeletal 50 pounds and had 21 broken bones in various stages of healing. A vegetable was found in her vagina.

At no time was she allowed to leave the apartment, spending countless hours chained to furniture, stuffed in a tiny closet, or locked out on a balcony. Her father, according to one witness, would kick her and force the helpless victim into a toilet and then flush.

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O’Marra had told the seven women and five men on the panel they could find Biddersingh guilty of lesser offences such as second-degree murder, attempted murder or manslaughter if they couldn’t agree on a first-degree murder conviction.

READ MORE: Jury urged to find Melonie Biddersingh drowned in unclear circumstances

Several hours into their deliberations, court resumed when jurors sought clarification on the law related to forcible or unlawful confinement and a short while later, they returned their verdict.

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According to the Crown, O’Marra told them earlier, Biddersingh knew the girl could die but never sought medical attention because her body was “riddled with signs of abuse.”

After she died, Biddersingh maintained his daughter had run away. He never filed a missing person’s report.

READ MORE: Crown asks jury to reach guilty verdict for dad accused of killing daughter 21 years ago

It was only in 2011 that his wife told a pastor what had happened, allowing police to identify the teen’s remains and lay charges in March 2012.

For its part, the defence argued that experts had concluded the teen drowned but no evidence shows her father actually did it.

Instead, the defence said Elaine Biddersingh, 54, drowned her stepdaughter because she hated her and believed she was possessed by the devil.

READ MORE: Wife of accused in ‘suitcase’ murder trial says husband was a ‘monster’

Given the circumstantial nature of the case, the prosecution relied heavily on the testimony of Biddersingh’s wife, an “angry, dishonest religious fanatic,” O’Marra said in citing the defence position.

While Biddersingh may have failed to care for and protect his daughter, that did not automatically lead to the conclusion he drowned her, O’Marra further recounted.

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Another key witness against the accused, his son Cleon Biddersingh, also lied to hide his own involvement in his sister’s abuse, the defence maintained.

READ MORE: Father of slain teen told family she had run away, brother tells murder trial

Yet neither he nor his stepmother, who faces her own first-degree murder trial in April, said Biddersingh drowned his daughter.

Formal sentencing will take place Feb. 8 to allow family members to give impact statements.

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