Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Comments closed.

Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.

Please see our Commenting Policy for more.

Terror Squad gang member Tyler Vandewater sentenced in Chris Van Camp killing

Tyler Vandewater was found guilty of second-degree murder after a judge rejected the notion that the Terror Squad member was acting in self-defence. Devon Latchuk / Global News

Terror Squad gang member Tyler Vandewater is ineligible for parole for 16 years after he killed his Saskatchewan Penitentiary cellmate, Chris Van Camp.

Story continues below advertisement

In March, Justice Brian Scherman rejected the 31-year-old’s self-defence argument and found him guilty of second-degree murder. The offence carries an automatic sentence of life in prison.

Van Camp, 37, was declared dead in his cell around 8:15 a.m. on June 7, 2017. An autopsy revealed he suffered more than 60 lacerations and wounds to his upper body.

The judge called the attack particularly gruesome and brutal.

“There is not one iota of evidence of conflict, of resistance, of any injury to Mr. Vandewater through this process,” Scherman said.

Crown prosecutor Linh Lê wanted parole ineligibility set between 16 and 18 years. Defence lawyer Brian Pfefferle argued for 14 years.

The daily email you need for Saskatoon's top news stories.

The judge noted how the ultimate decision around parole will fall on Parole Board of Canada, and his 16-year ruling only sets a minimum for Vandewater’s eligibility.

Story continues below advertisement
Tyler Vandewater was found guilty of murdering Chris Van Camp (pictured) when both were living on a maximum-security range for Terror Squad gang members. Facebook

The sentence also comes with a lifetime ban on firearms, ammunition and explosives.

During his January trial, Vandewater said he considered Van Camp “like family.” The pair shared a cell before Van Camp was released from Saskatchewan Penitentiary on conditions.

The victim returned to the facility after a drug overdose, which Correctional Service Canada deemed a parole violation.

During victim impact statements, Van Camp’s mother Lauren Laithwaite recalled spending five days with her son in hospital after his overdose, “just praying that he would survive.”

Story continues below advertisement

Had he died before returning to the penitentiary, it “would have been so much more compassionate and dignified,” she said.

Vandewater is appealing his conviction, arguing the judge erred in his consideration of the accused’s self-defence argument. His notice appeal also states the verdict was unreasonable, relied on inappropriate evidence and wasn’t supported by admissible evidence.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article