Penticton Herald

Beckett guilty of murdering wife

- By ANDREA PEACOCK

Peter Beckett is guilty of killing his wife during a summer 2010 camping trip, a Kelowna jury ruled Saturday afternoon.

Beckett was charged with first-degree murder in the death of his wife, Laura Letts-Beckett, who drowned in Upper Arrow Lake while the two of them were out on a small boat.

Beckett is a former city councillor in Napier, New Zealand, while Letts-Beckett was working as a teacher at Dapp Elementary School in Alberta at the time of her death. The couple lived in Westlock, Alta. The trial lasted just over three weeks, and the jury began deliberati­ng Tuesday afternoon.

The unanimous guilty verdict was announced in court on Saturday at 5 p.m.

Beckett was on trial for the same charge in Kamloops last year, but it was declared a mistrial after the jury could not come to a unanimous decision after seven days of deliberati­ons.

That trial lasted several months, and many more witnesses were called, including Beckett, who did not testify in the Kelowna trial.

Letts-Beckett’s family was at the courthouse for the decision.

Her father, Park Letts, expressed thankfulne­ss for the outcome and described his daughter as a “gem of a gal.”

“It does give us closure,” he said. “We’re going to meet our daughter again, and that’s a great hope we have.”

Throughout the trial, it was revealed Beckett and his wife separated in 2007 because of Beckett’s treatment of his wife’s parents.

After the couple reunited, Letts-Beckett was estranged from her parents.

“She met an individual who I guess was charming, not to me particular­ly, but obviously to her . . . she thought they could have a happy life together,” said Letts.

Outside the courthouse, Letts had one message for the man who killed his daughter.

“I would say I’m very sorry that he had such a wonderful gal that supported him and he couldn’t enjoy that because it seemed like his only motive was dollars,” he said. “I guess I wonder if he really loved the girl or loved what she had.”

Crown argued the murder was a plot to cash in on Letts-Beckett’s life insurance policy and to get at her inheritanc­e.

Letts said his family is working toward forgiving Beckett.

“We have to forgive,” he said. “If we can’t forgive, we’ll live in misery the rest of our life. It’s not easy. But we have to do it.”

Beckett was sentenced to the mandatory life sentence in jail with no chance at parole for 25 years.

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