The Prince George Citizen

Case against father accused in daughters’ deaths circumstan­tial: defence

- Hina ALAM

VANCOUVER — A defence lawyer says the Crown’s theory against a father accused of killing his two young daughters at Christmas in 2017 is circumstan­tial and his client’s evidence was consistent in denying the allegation­s.

Kevin McCullough told a B.C. Supreme Court jury Tuesday that the prosecutio­n couldn’t fill in gaps in its case against Andrew Berry including for the time of death for the girls and a motive for the alleged crime. He also disputed an allegation made by the Crown that Berry attempted suicide after killing his daughters.

“When the accused takes the stand and gives you detailed evidence that he didn’t do it the Crown better prove that he is a liar,” McCullough said in his closing arguments. “The accused was subjected to the most rigorous cross-examinatio­n in this trial and his evidence, whether you like it or not, was eternally consistent.”

Berry is charged with seconddegr­ee murder in the stabbing deaths of his daughters, four-yearold Aubrey Berry and six-year-old Chloe Berry. Their bodies were found in his home in the Victoria suburb of Oak Bay on Christmas Day in 2017.

He was found in the bathtub with stab wounds to his throat and chest. He told the jury earlier in the trial that he was attacked by a man with dark skin and hair, but the Crown has suggested his wounds were self-inflicted.

“The Crown case here is completely circumstan­tial,” McCullough said, adding there was “not a scintilla of evidence” to show that Berry stabbed himself.

“If you have a reasonable doubt that Mr. Berry caused his own injuries, then you have a reasonable doubt that he killed the girls because you have a reasonable doubt that someone else stabbed him. That’s why proof beyond a reasonable doubt is so critical.”

In his testimony, Berry said he owed thousands of dollars to a loan shark, whose two henchmen visited his apartment several times before the murders.

McCullough also questioned the credibilit­y of several Crown witnesses, including a blood-spatter expert who he asserted was “in over her head” on a job she was doing for the first time.

“She struggled because the scene was too much for her,” McCullough said.

He challenged the Crown’s theory the girls were killed in their beds around 8 a.m. Christmas Day.

McCullough asked why there was no blood on a suicide note that police found when they went to the apartment that day.

“Yet the Crown would have you believe Mr. Berry killed the children around 8 a.m. and wandered around the house all day, not touching the suicide note he wrote for his sister.”

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