Vancouver Sun

TEEN ADMITS TO KILLING GIRL, 11, ON REMOTE RESERVE.

- JAMES TURNER

WINNIPEG • A teen who willingly gave a DNA sample to police investigat­ing the death of a girl in a remote Manitoba First Nation community has admitted he killed her while sexually assaulting her.

The boy, who is now 17, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder in Court of Queen’s Bench on Thursday. He cannot be identified under Canada’s youth justice laws.

Teresa Robinson was 11 when she disappeare­d after leaving a birthday party in Garden Hill on the night of May 5, 2015. She wasn’t reported missing to RCMP until six days later.

That same day, searchers found her lower torso in a wooded area and her skull about nine metres away, according to a brief statement of facts presented in court by Crown attorney Chris Vanderhoof­t.

It was initially believed she had been killed by a bear.

Injuries uncovered during an autopsy, however, led police to collect a DNA sample.

That set off what Vanderhoof­t described as a “lengthy and protracted” homicide investigat­ion in the community of 2,500 people, about 500 km northeast of Winnipeg.

In their efforts to find Teresa’s killer, RCMP collected hundreds of voluntary DNA samples from community members.

“It was in the course of that sweep that (they) took a consent sample from the accused,” said Vanderhoof­t.

The sample matched the DNA taken from the girl’s body and led to the teen’s arrest in March 2016. Another DNA sample was taken by police and also matched, Justice Chris Martin was told.

Crown and defence lawyers said they will recommend the teen be sentenced as a youth when court reconvenes Feb. 5. They will also recommend the maximum youth sentence of 10 years — six years in custody followed by four under supervisio­n in the community.

They want the teen to get two years of credit for time served in remand.

The full facts of the investigat­ion and informatio­n about the teen’s background are to be presented at the February hearing.

Outside court, Teresa’s mother said the boy’s guilty plea would bring her some closure.

“All he kept saying was that he didn’t ... do that, he wouldn’t do that,” Sandra Robinson said.

She said she hasn’t yet turned her mind to what she wants to tell her daughter’s killer when given a chance.

“I haven’t even thought about that,” she said.

Teresa was very well-liked in her community, Robinson said. “Everybody loved her.

“She was a little girl. She was my baby.”

SHE WAS A LITTLE GIRL. SHE WAS MY BABY ... EVERYBODY LOVED HER.

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