Times Colonist

Infant’s teen killer to get adult sentence

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SASKATOON — A teenage girl who killed a six-week-old infant after his family took her in to help her will serve an adult sentence.

Judge Sanjeev Anand’s decision in Saskatoon provincial court Tuesday was met with applause from the baby boy’s family and supporters.

The teen, who is now 18, will serve life in prison with no parole eligibilit­y for seven years.

The teen was 16 when she killed Nikosis Jace Cantre in July 2016. The baby’s mother, Alyssa Bird, found her son in his playpen — bruised, bloody, swollen, scratched and gasping for air.

Court heard that Nikosis died of blunt force trauma to the head after the teen choked, punched, kicked and stabbed him with a metal nail.

“My hope is that you will take advantage of any and all supports that are offered to you while you’re serving your time in custody,” Anand told the teen.

He recommende­d she serve her sentence at Saskatoon’s Regional Psychiatri­c Centre.

The girl, whose identity has been protected under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. The publicatio­n ban on her name will remain during a 30-day appeal period.

Anand said the teen showed “moral sophistica­tion” in the killing and agreed with the Crown that the teen’s immaturity and impulsiven­ess was not related to her age.

“The consensus is that she will need lifelong care because she will not outgrow the impulsivit­y and immaturity associated with her [fetal alcohol spectrum disorder] diagnosis,” the judge said.

Psychologi­cal reports indicated the teen had a history of violence that included squeezing the life out of a mouse at a pet store and nearly killing her 10-year-old cousin with morphine pills.

The girl was serving an opencustod­y sentence at the Kilburn Hall youth facility in July 2016 and had run off. She was roaming the streets in Saskatoon looking for a place to stay when she told a woman she had escaped from a group home.

An agreed statement of facts says the stranger gave her food, clothing and tried to take her to a youth centre, but it was closed.

The woman eventually took the teen to the home where Nikosis and his family lived. The girl had never met the family, but they agreed to let her stay.

The teen described to a police officer how she walked into the baby’s room and held him “like a mom” before she became angry and began punching him.

“I was sick and tired of life,” she said. “That’s why I hurt that baby and I killed it.”

Prosecutor Jennifer ClaxtonVic­kzo argued for an adult sentence at a December hearing. She said the teen was a threat to public safety and needed lifelong care and services, which aren’t available with a youth sentence.

Defence lawyer Brian Pfefferle argued the teen should receive a youth sentence because she was younger in “almost every other way” than her 16 years. He said her severe cognitive disabiliti­es and fetal alcohol syndrome lowered her degree of moral blameworth­iness.

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