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B.C. judge orders former home of baseball-bat attacker to be sold, proceeds to victim

WATCH: The mother of a B.C. teen who suffered life-altering injuries in a brutal 2016 baseball bat beating says a civil judgement awarding the family millions in damages is not the end of her fight for justice for her son. Catherine Urquhart reports – Feb 23, 2021

The house formerly belonging to Kristopher Teichrieb — the man who brutally beat a Kamloops teen with a baseball bat more than six years ago — will be sold, with the sale benefiting the victim’s family.

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On Thursday morning, a B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled that when Teichrieb sold his home to his parents for $1, he was trying to shield his assets from the impending civil liability.

In 2016, Teichrieb beat Jessie Simpson with a metal baseball bat.

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Simpson, 18 years old at the time of the attack, suffered life-altering injuries and permanent brain damage.

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Teichrieb eventually pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and was sentenced to seven years in prison.

When Simpson’s mother sued Teichrieb on her son’s behalf, Teichrieb was found liable, and Simpson’s family was awarded almost $7 million.

However, the Simpsons haven’t seen any money. Teichrieb sold his Brocklehurst home — worth an estimated nearly $600,000 — for next to nothing.

By order of the judge, the house will go on the market in April and Teichrieb’s parents, who currently live there, will have to move out.

According to the judge, Teichrieb had to have known he would be facing both criminal and financial consequences which resulted in him looking to shield his assets.

In a message to Global News, Simpson’s mother said “finally, a bit of justice has been served.”

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