Truro News

Court rejects bid to delay appeal in murder of young Inuit woman

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A Nova Scotia woman who pleaded guilty to murdering a young Inuit woman has failed to win a delay in her appeal, as she acts as her own lawyer.

Victoria Henneberry is asking for a new trial on grounds that she panicked when she pleaded guilty to the second-degree murder of Loretta Saunders of Labrador, a former roommate in Halifax whose body was found on the side of a New Brunswick highway in February 2014.

The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal ruled the case will go forward, after Crown lawyer Mark Scott asked it to reject Henneberry’s claim that she isn’t ready.

Henneberry is representi­ng herself, and argued she was not prepared mentally, that her mental health assessment­s have not been fully compiled, and she hasn’t found a psychiatri­st she’s comfortabl­e with.

Henneberry didn’t bring any documents with her and only one piece of evidence, a written note by a psychiatri­st she once saw recording Henneberry’s past and present mental state.

Henneberry and her boyfriend, Blake Leggette, pleaded guilty as their murder trial was starting on April 22, 2015.

Henneberry was sentenced to life in prison with no eligibilit­y for parole for 10 years, while Leggette was sentenced to a mandatory life sentence with no parole eligibilit­y for 25 years for a first-degree conviction.

Two statements of fact submitted to Nova Scotia Supreme Court say the couple was having “financial difficulti­es” soon after they moved into a sublet room in Saunders’ apartment, which they had found through a Kijiji ad in January 2014.

The documents say the two wanted to get out of Halifax, but give no indication why.

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Henneberry

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