'A cursed day': Teen lives with pain of mother's cold-hearted slaying - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 03:14 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

'A cursed day': Teen lives with pain of mother's cold-hearted slaying

Three of six men convicted of manslaughter and extortion in a brutal kidnapping and double slaying were forced to consider the impacts of their actions as loved ones of the victims presented a B.C. Supreme Court judge with impact statements.

Friends and relatives of victims in 2016 double slaying gave searing accounts of grief and loss

Samantha Le and Xuan Van Vy Ba-cao were both shot twice in the head in September 2016 when they unwittingly walked into a kidnapping. (Families' Go Fund Me photos)

Samatha Le's daughter turned 12 on the day her mother was killed shot twice in the head at close range because she had the misfortuneto interrupt a kidnapping.

The girl was celebrating her birthdaywhen her mother died. She has been haunted ever since.

"This is a cursed day for me now. I cannot ever celebrate my birthday again," the girl, now 14, said in a written victim impact statement read out in B.C. Supreme Court Thursday.

"I am scarred permanentlyand I cannot go back intime and bring her back. If only I hadn't gone out with my friends, maybe this wouldn't have happened. But it did."

'This strikes at the human condition'

A Crown prosecutor read the girl's statement into the record Thursday at a sentencing hearing forthree of six men convicted of killing 29-year-oldLe and 24-year-old Xuan Van Vy Ba-Caoin East Vancouver on Sept. 17, 2016.

Matthew Stewart, EllwoodBradbury and Erlan Acostawere also found guilty of kidnapping and extorting the target of the scheme, whose name is protected by a publication ban.

A sentencing hearing for the other three co-accused will happen at a later date. Sentences against all six will be pronounced at the same time.

From left to right: Ellwood Thomas Bradbury, Matthew Scott Stewart and Erlan Lizardo Acosta are being sentenced in B.C. Supreme Court for manslaughter and kidnapping. (Vancouver Police Department)

Stewart, Bradbury and Acostasat impassively as Crown counsel Karima Andanipresented impact statements from nearly a dozen people whose lives have been torn apart by a brutal series of crimes that included the killingof Le and Ba-Cao in front of a four-year-old child.

"This isn't like manslaughter that goes wrong when you have an assault or a punch where emotions are high. This was an execution with two shots to the head," Andanitold Justice Arne Silverman.

"This child was left with the bodies for several hours. This strikes at the human condition for how we care for children."

The Crown is seeking a total of 38 years in prison for the combination of charges: 20 years for manslaughter in the deaths of Le and Ba-Cao and 18 years to be served consecutively for extortion, kidnapping and aggravated assault.

Defence lawyers are expected to argue for a much lower penalty.

'What do I have to do?'

Stewart flexed his back muscles before sitting back in the prisoner's dock, licking a finger and working at a piece of dirt on his shoeas Andanilaid out the ripple effects of the crime, starting with a statement from the kidnapping victim.

"Perhaps I shall start with some math," the man wrote, as he went on to calculate the number of people directly and peripherally affected. He stopped at 52.

"I could go on," wrote the man, who was maimed over a span of 45 hours as his captors kicked, punched and tortured him in a bid to extract money.

"This is the breadth of their crime ... my life was by no means perfect, but it was getting close. I had family, I had friends, I was well regarded and respected, a successful career and a future that I finally looked forward to. I had a life. NowI am a world away from all that matters to mealone."

Vancouver police investigators found the bodies of Samantha Le and Xuan Van Vy Ba-Cao in a house in East Vancouver in September 2016. (Belle Puri/CBC)

Both Ba-Cao'sparents wrote letters speaking about the loss of a child.

"Both my family and soul collapsed because there was nothing to hold onto. There are no words to describe it," Ba-Cao's mother wrote.

"What do I have to do to hold my child in my arms?"

'I listen to her lay in bed crying'

Andani listed a string of aggravating factors in asking Silverman to consider putting the men away for nearly four decades: greed,cold-blooded planningand the decision to kill two people who posed no threat.

"This level of callousness is almost unimaginable," she said. "These actions also tell you everything about their true character."

Le's daughter now lives with her aunt, who also wrote a victim impact statement.

"I spend a lot of time crying:when I'm driving, when I'm home, when I'm sleeping, when I'm awake. The memory of mysister and the circumstances surrounding her death are constantly on my mind," the woman wrote.

"I'm constantly trying to figure out how she felt at the moment when she realized she was about to lose her life."

She said that she seesLe's daughter askingherself the same questions.

"You robbed her of a life together with her mother on her birthday weekend," the woman wrote.

"Now a day that should have been a celebration of life is filled with bitter sadness, a cursed memory. I listen to her lay in bed crying... I've watched her hold her breath and tears when they bring up her mother or as she watches in envy as her friends are embraced by their mothers. It's a terrible thing."

As the statements were read, Stewart kept rubbing away at the speck of dirt. His shoewas spotless, the imperfection visible only tohim.