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Pastor tells suitcase murder trial of stepmother’s confession that led to break in case

A courtroom sketch from Nov. 9, 2015 of Elaine Biddersingh. Pam Davies/Global News

TORONTO — An Ontario pastor is telling the trial of a woman accused in the death of her stepdaughter about a confession that led to a break in a homicide case that lay unsolved for years.

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Rev. Eduardo Cruz says Elaine Biddersingh came to him in November 2011 and told him about the death of her stepdaughter, Melonie.

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READ MORE: First-degree murder trial begins for woman charged in stepdaughter’s death

He says Biddersingh told him about how Melonie came from Jamaica to live in the family home in Toronto.

Cruz says Biddersingh told him Melonie was confined, denied food, water and medical attention before she died.

READ MORE: Everton Biddersingh sentenced to life in prison for murder of daughter in 1994

Biddersingh has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of 17-year-old Melonie, whose body was found in a burning suitcase in an industrial parking lot north of Toronto in 1994.

Melonie’s identity remained a mystery until 2011, when Cruz went to police after his conversation with Biddersingh.

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