Times Colonist

Convicted cop killer gets at least 13 1⁄2 years

- ALY THOMSON

HALIFAX — A Halifax man convicted of strangling an off-duty police officer and using a compost bin to dispose of her body will spend at least 13 1⁄2 years in prison, a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge ruled Tuesday as he detailed how Christophe­r Garnier killed Catherine Campbell and “treated her remains like garbage.”

Garnier was convicted in December of second-degree murder and interferin­g with a dead body in the death of the 36-yearold Truro, N.S., police officer.

The conviction carries an automatic life sentence, but Justice Joshua Arnold decided Tuesday that Garnier would be able to apply for parole after serving 13 1⁄2 years — less 699 days for time served.

Garnier, 30, showed no emotion as the decision was read. As he was escorted out of the courtroom by sheriffs, he looked toward his family and nodded.

He had met Campbell for the first time at a downtown Halifax bar, and hours later she was dead in a north-end apartment.

“On Sept. 11, 2015, as shown on the surveillan­ce video from the [Halifax Alehouse], Catherine Campbell was expecting romance and affection on the evening she was murdered. She was vulnerable,” said Arnold, standing at a podium at the head of a windowless courtroom.

“For reasons unknown, Mr. Garnier punched her in the face, broke her nose, strangled her to death, and then, in an effort to hide his crime, treated her remains like garbage.”

Arnold detailed how Garnier attempted to cover up the murder.

“After she was strangled to death, Mr. Garnier put Ms. Campbell’s body in a green bin. He put garbage bags on top of her body, and in the green bin, to hide her body. He then wheeled her throughout the north end of Halifax, dropped her down a small cliff, dragged her through brush, and eventually put a large box used to house feral cats on top of Ms. Campbell’s remains.”

Arnold noted that Dr. Matthew Bowes, Nova Scotia’s chief medical examiner, had told the jury it would take between two and six minutes to cause death by strangulat­ion.

“Therefore, Ms. Campbell’s death was not akin to a single punch that results in death, a quick squeeze of a trigger, or even the quick stroke of a knife,” he said. “Mr. Garnier intentiona­lly squeezed the life out of Ms. Campbell over a number of minutes, and such action was not merely a split-second lapse of self-control.”

Arnold said although Garnier had no criminal record, led a prosocial lifestyle and had positive character references, those factors did not outweigh the aggravatin­g factors of the case.

He also noted that Campbell was a trained police officer, and women with less self-defence training would be “deeply troubled by this crime.”

During his trial, Garnier repeatedly told the jury he did not remember using a large green compost bin to dispose of the body near the bridge, where it stayed undetected for nearly five days.

Garnier had also argued that Campbell died accidental­ly during rough sex that she initiated.

But Arnold noted the jury “clearly rejected” his testimony.

He sentenced Garnier to four years in prison for interferin­g with human remains, to be served concurrent­ly with his life sentence.

The Crown had argued Monday that Garnier should serve 16 years before he’s able to apply for parole, while the defence argued Garnier should become eligible for parole after serving 10 years.

Crown attorney Christine Driscoll said she respects Arnold’s decision, and noted that Garnier is serving a life sentence, regardless of when he can apply for parole.

“He is supervised for the rest of his living days,” said Driscoll outside of court. “It does not mean that he necessaril­y gets out at 13 1⁄2 years. Some people who commit homicide never are paroled, and some are. It depends on how he uses his time while in custody.”

 ??  ?? Christophe­r Garnier arrives at Nova Scotia Supreme Court in Halifax. He was convicted of second-degree murder in the death of off-duty police officer Const. Catherine Campbell.
Christophe­r Garnier arrives at Nova Scotia Supreme Court in Halifax. He was convicted of second-degree murder in the death of off-duty police officer Const. Catherine Campbell.

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