National Post

Lawyer gets bail pending murder appeal

- Paola loriggio

TORONTO • A Toronto lawyer who conspired with his lover to kill his husband has been released on bail while he appeals his murder conviction.

Demitry Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne and his lover, Michael Ivezic, were convicted in June of first-degree murder in the killing of Allan Lanteigne. Both were sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

Court documents show Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne, 38, is seeking to appeal his conviction, alleging the jury’s verdict was unreasonab­le because it was based entirely on circumstan­tial evidence.

The pair’s murder trial heard Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne was in Greece, where he owns a home, when his husband was bludgeoned to death at their Toronto residence in March 2011.

However, court heard Ivezic — with whom Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne was having an affair — had returned to Toronto after visiting his lover in Greece and his DNA was found under Lanteigne’s fingernail­s.

Prosecutor­s alleged Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne arranged to have his husband arrive at the couple’s home at a certain time, while Ivezic waited to carry out the killing.

Crown attorneys alleged money was the key motive, as it had been a source of strife for the couple and the two men had taken out a $2-million life insurance policy together a few years earlier, court documents show.

Shortly after the murder, Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne attempted to collect on the policy and on survivor benefits from his deceased husband’s employer, the documents show.

Prosecutor­s alleged email exchanges between Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne and his husband, and those between him and his lover, proved his involvemen­t in the murder plot.

They pointed to one email in particular, sent the day of the killing, in which Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne insisted his husband be home by a certain time.

In seeking to have his conviction overturned, Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne alleges the trial judge misapprehe­nded the email and that his correspond­ence with both men is open to interpreta­tion.

The court of appeal has granted him bail until his case is concluded, under the supervisio­n of his mother, his stepfather and his stepfather’s mother, according to court documents.

While on bail, Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne is under strict house arrest and monitored through a GPS ankle bracelet that he pays for himself, the documents say.

The appeal court said it considered Papasotiri­ou-Lanteigne’s compliance with his pre-trial bail conditions in agreeing to his release.

The judge also said there is no concern for public safety.

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