Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Jury finds man not guilty in fatal stabbing of brother

- HEATHER POLISCHUK hpolischuk@postmedia.com twitter.com/LPHeatherP

A Regina jury has found a 38-year-old man accused of fatally stabbing his brother not guilty.

Stevin Blaine Pascal wiped tears from his eyes and numerous family members burst into relieved tears as the jury acquitted him of second-degree murder in the death of his younger brother, 22-yearold Trent Mark Gordon, on May 25, 2015.

Following a week and a half of hearing evidence, the jury returned to Regina Court of Queen’s Bench on Thursday when they received instructio­ns from Justice Richard Elson. They began deliberati­ng at about 1:15 p.m. and returned with a verdict at about 7:30 p.m.

After dismissing the jury, Elson took a few moments to speak to Pascal.

“None of this brings your brother Trent back,” he said, to which Pascal tearfully moaned, “I know.”

“I sincerely hope that you, your family and the people that are close to you will recover and heal ... (from) circumstan­ces that can only be described as a senseless tragedy,” Elson said.

Family of the brothers said they were relieved Pascal was coming home.

“We can’t have both of them, at least we’ve got one, right?” said Tammy Pascal, Stevin’s cousin.

Shortly after, Stevin Pascal left the courthouse a free man, exchanging emotional embraces with family. He declined to speak to reporters.

In his charge to the jury, Elson provided jurors with three possible verdicts: guilty of second-degree murder as charged; not guilty of second-degree murder but guilty of the lesser and included charge of manslaught­er; or not guilty of any offence because of self-defence.

The judge explained the law in general, as well as how it pertained to testimony jurors heard during the trial.

The jury heard from a variety of witnesses — including Pascal himself — who provided details of an incident that began when Gordon and his girlfriend returned to the Athol Street house where they were living with Pascal and his girlfriend.

Court heard Pascal and his partner had allowed several people to crash at the house, and that Gordon evicted everyone, including his brother. Witnesses testified Gordon chased Pascal onto the street.

Elson noted witnesses diverged on their testimony once the incident ended up on the street shortly before 3 a.m.

What was clear, according to the forensic pathologis­t who did the autopsy, was that the single stab wound that punctured Gordon’s heart and lung was made by something thinner than those knives.

Pascal claimed his brother was coming at him with a machete and that he thought he was about to be attacked. He said he was running from Gordon when he made a backhanded swing with a paring knife (that was never located), but didn’t know he had connected.

But the Crown argued Pascal stabbed Gordon during what was essentiall­y a fist fight.

Defence lawyer Kim Stinson urged the jury to find his client had taken reasonable steps to avoid a confrontat­ion, and took action against an imminent and potentiall­y lethal threat when he stabbed Gordon.

The verdict suggests the jury agreed.

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