Medicine Hat News

Ontario homeowner acquitted in shooting death

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tragic deaths are unanswered by the Canadian justice system.”

Boushie’s cousin, Jade Tootoosis, issued a statement saying the not-guilty verdict fits into a pattern of discrimina­tion against Indigenous victims and exoneratio­n of white settlers.

“I shake my head and cry in fury. How is this happening right now? How is this happening AGAIN!?” said Tootoosis.

“Where is it acceptable to grab a gun and shoot instead of picking up the phone and calling the cops?”

A spokeswoma­n for Indigenous advocacy group Justice of Our Stolen Children called Khill’s acquittal “typical.”

“For some reason, when Indigenous people are killed by non-Indigenous people, it is very often considered justifiabl­e homicide,” said Robyn Pitawanakw­at.

Her organizati­on has been camped outside the Saskatchew­an legislatur­e since February, in protest of Stanley’s acquittal and the acquittal of Manitoba man Raymond Cormier, charged with seconddegr­ee murder in the death of Indigenous teenager Tina Fontaine.

Khill remained stoic as the verdict was read out. Once the proceeding­s were finished, he embraced his tearful wife, who is six months pregnant with the couple’s first child.

His lawyer said later Khill told him he was grateful for the verdict.

“He said, ‘I just want to thank the jury for the way they dealt with the evidence and in addition thank family and friends for their support,’” Jeffrey Manishen told reporters outside court.

The legal proceeding­s had been particular­ly stressful for Khill and his wife, Melinda Benko, the lawyer said.

“Even the issue of deciding to get married not that long before the trial, that was certainly one they had to consider, but I think their support for one another is very strong,” Manishen said.

Styres’s family said they would not comment or answer questions about the trial or its outcome.

The trial heard that Khill and Benko awoke to the sound of banging outside their rural home early on a February morning in 2016. Khill looked out the window and saw Styres inside his truck, the jury heard. Khill loaded his shotgun, left the home through the back door and went to confront Styres, court heard.

At trial Khill testified that he had yelled at Styres to put his hands up and fired as Styres began to turn towards him. Styres was facing sideways with his hands at waist height when he was shot, Crown lawyer Steve O’Brien told the jury.

Only after Khill fired two shots at Styres did Benko call 911.

The Crown argued at trial that Styres did not pose a reasonable threat to Khill and Benko while they were inside their locked home, and that Khill should have called 911 and waited for police rather than run out of the house with a loaded shotgun.

Manishen told the jury Khill was simply following his training as a military reservist to “neutralize” a threat to his life.

“Soldiers react proactivel­y, that’s how they are trained,” Manishen said in his closing address. “Mr. Khill said that’s why he acted the way he acted. To take control of the situation.”

After the verdict, Manishen told reporters he thought Khill’s military service was a central point of the trial, and was significan­t to determinin­g whether Khill had acted reasonably to defend himself under the circumstan­ces.

Tootoosis pushed back against that notion in her statement, saying Khill’s training should have better prepared him to show “proper control and restraint.”

“If Peter Khill was a soldier for the colonial state, why was he not capable of determinin­g threat levels? What were his rules of engagement?” she said.

“Is this how settlers and their soldiers are trained to respond to Indigenous people? Historical­ly it was, and we see it’s still in play today.”

Superior Court Justice Stephen Glithero told the jury that self-defence can be justified by the reasonable belief that a person is being threatened, whether that threat actually exists.

The jury was also given the option of finding Khill guilty of manslaught­er if they decided he had not acted in self-defence but had also not meant to kill or inflict potentiall­y deadly harm on Styres. In the end, jurors found Khill not guilty of both second-degree murder and manslaught­er.

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