Advertisement

Man accused of killing Monica Jack lied about murder: defence lawyer

Click to play video: 'Monica Jack murder case nearing conclusion'
Monica Jack murder case nearing conclusion
WATCH: The defence for Garry Handlen, the man accused of killing 12-year-old Monica Jack was back at it Monday, as the case nears its close. Rumina Daya has more on the girl's family's push for justice – Jan 7, 2019

VANCOUVER – A defence lawyer for a man charged with murdering a 12-year-old girl in British Columbia says his client lied when he confessed to the crime during a so-called Mr. Big operation.

In final arguments to a B.C. Supreme Court jury, Patrick Angly says Garry Handlen told multiple lies throughout the nearly nine-month undercover operation, not because he was boasting as the Crown has suggested but because “he is a liar.”

Angly says Handlen’s lies stretched from saying he had been a member of the British army’s Special Air Service to saying he smuggled goods across international lines as a scuba diver and studied for a pilot’s licence.

WATCH: Monica Jack’s mother speaks out about daughter and trial process

Click to play video: 'Monica Jack’s mother speaks out about daughter and trial process'
Monica Jack’s mother speaks out about daughter and trial process

Angly says none of that was true but it was in his client’s best interest to carry on with his lies and even confess to murder as he felt his dreams in a close-knit organized crime group could be snatched away.

Story continues below advertisement

Handlen has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death Monica Jack, who was last seen on May 6, 1978, as she rode her bike in Merritt, B.C.

Globalnews.ca coverage of the Monica Jack murder trial

RCMP undercover officers befriended Handlen in early 2014 in Minden, Ont., and paid him nearly $12,000 to do jobs such as smuggling cigarettes, loan sharking and repossessing vehicles.

Sponsored content

AdChoices