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... and now upon reflection of the Vader case, and several arguments made by my better half... how did he get charged without the ME having anything to confirm death? Did ME sign the certificate? Was he charged without a death certificate? Were the charges stayed because perhaps they couldn't prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the victims are deceased?
Not being well versed on the Vader case, I cannot comment on the how's and why's. Putting a pin in this for now...
This is not the first case of homicide without the bodies in Calgary.
"A Calgary judge in 1987 found Al Dolejs guilty of two counts of second-degree murder for killing his 12-year-old son Paul and 10-year-old daughter Gabi. Their bodies were not located until months after Dolejs was sentenced to life."
http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/canada/cal...-could-be-prosecuted-without-bodies-1.2706996
From the same article - snipped:
Though such cases are unusual, the absence of victims' bodies does not preclude a murder charge in Canada. A prosecution can still build a solid case, retired Toronto homicide detective Dave Perry said.
"It's not really about not having a body; it's about how much evidence do they have without a body," he said.
"You don't need the body for a conviction, but every case you work on, of course you want to get everything possible in terms of evidence."
"There have been successful prosecutions of people where the body was never found," Toronto criminal defence lawyer Michael Lacy said.
"If you think about it, that makes sense that you shouldn't necessarily need a body. Otherwise, everybody who's going to get away with murder would just make sure they dispose of a body, in acid or whatever."
Proving death is among the essential elements in the offence of murder.
"But I wouldn't want to suggest that that makes this a very difficult prosecution. It doesn't," Lacy said. "It really depends on other circumstances *a motive, for example, would be an important element of the Crown's case."
.....
The two types of murder charges in this case are also telling.
First-degree murder in Canada refers to a planned and premeditated crime.
"They have evidence an individual went to that house for the purposes of committing that crime," Holmgren said. "For the second-degree murder charge, the individual might not have known there was a little boy in this house, and didn't have the premeditated component to have planned that murder, but in the commission of committing the alleged [planned] crimes, the person is presumed to have also murdered the little boy."
.....
IMHO, the Medical Examiner is a 'silent partner' that never receives much press coverage, yet is the determining factor in these declarations. The ME is a publicly paid employee entrusted to carry out such determinations under the 'fatalities Inquiry Act' and as such:
"When a death occurs suddenly or it cannot be explained, the OCME conducts an investigation, under the authority of the Fatality Inquiries Act.
We hold each of our investigations to determine:
who died, where they died, when they died, why they died, how they died..."
http://justice.alberta.ca/programs_services/fatality/ocme/Pages/default.aspx
Of course, the defense has every right to question, cross-examine and solicit rebuttal expert witnesses. There are plenty of those willing to speak... for a hefty fee -
Janne Holmgren, an associate professor in the Department of Justice Studies at Calgary's Mount Royal University says, "based on that evidence, they would have been able to say that if those people didn't receive that urgent medical care, somebody died..."
"We always say the body speaks volumes. The dead speak volumes,"