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Man sentenced after killing Indigenous woman in northern Alberta, moving body to Manitoba

Police say Gloria Gladue was reported missing by her family on Nov. 17, 2015. Courtesy, RCMP

A man was sentenced Thursday to 11 years for killing an Indigenous woman in northern Alberta and later moving her body to Manitoba.

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Grant Sneesby, 72, stabbed Gloria Gladue multiple times in October 2015 before destroying her cellphone, burning her clothes, wrapping her body in plastic and storing it in a trailer.

At his trial, court heard that at some point Sneesby transported the body of the 44-year-old woman to Manitoba.

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Gladue, a member of Bigstone Cree Nation, was last seen in Wabasca, Alta., about 330 kilometres north of Edmonton, in October 2015 and reported missing by her family a month later.

READ MORE: Manitoba man charged in killing of Alberta woman who vanished in 2015

Her remains were found in rural Manitoba almost three years later by undercover RCMP officers.

In June, a jury convicted Sneesby of manslaughter instead of the initial charge of second-degree murder. He had pleaded guilty to causing indignity to Gladue’s remains.

“This was a brutal and callous killing,” said King’s Bench Justice Paul Belzil during sentencing in Peace River, Alta. “Gloria Gladue’s life was senselessly ended by the actions of Mr. Sneesby.”

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Sneesby was credited seven years for his time in pretrial custody, leaving him three years and 221 days left to serve.

In addition to his prison sentence, Sneesby has a lifetime firearm ban.

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