Raymond Cormier to fight Tina Fontaine murder charge, lawyer says - Action News
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Manitoba

Raymond Cormier to fight Tina Fontaine murder charge, lawyer says

Raymond Cormier will contest the second-degree murder charge he faces in the death of Tina Fontaine, 15, whose body was pulled from the Red River in Winnipeg in 2014, his lawyer says.

53-year-old charged with 2nd-degree murder in teen's death in Winnipeg

The body of Tina Fontaine, left, was recovered from the Red River in Winnipeg on Aug. 17, 2014. Raymond Cormier, right, has been charged with second-degree murder in the teen's death.

Raymond Cormierwillcontest the second-degree murder chargehe faces in the death of Tina Fontaine, 15, his lawyer says.

Cormier, 53, was supposed to make his first court appearance on Tuesday, after he was arrested and charged last week.His case was put overto Jan. 8.

"He is contesting the charge," his lawyer, Pam Smith, said in an email.

Smith saidCormier will not seekbail at this time. The case is being delayedwhile she waits toreceivethe full police report, she added.

Fontaine's body was recovered from the Red River in Winnipeg on Aug. 17, 2014.

Court documents show police believe Fontaine was killed on or around Aug. 10, 2014, a day after she was last reported missing.

Originally from New Brunswick, Cormier moved to Winnipeg about three years before Fontaine's death, but that was not where police found him.

Winnipeg police Deputy Chief Danny Smythsaid on WednesdayCormier was arrested in Whistler, B.C.,transported to Vancouver for processing and brought back to Manitoba.

Smyth remarkedthere was "some covert operation stuff going on," during Cormier's arrest, but would not elaborate.

Long history of crime

Parole board documents suggest Cormier has a long history of violent crimes fuelled by drug addiction.

Cormierhas racked up at least 92 criminal convictions for offencesthat include theft, robbery, obstruction of justice, fleeing from a peace officer and weapons- and drug-related charges.

The parole board revoked Cormier's statutory release in 2012 after he had served time for robbery and noted he was a high risk to reoffend.

Previous court documents show that since 1978, Cormier has spent more than 23 years in prison for various offences that include assault and theft.

"File information indicates that you were under the influence of illegal substances for most of your past offences, and the assaults were most often during your attempt to steal money from your victims for drugs," said a parole board report from 2012.

Calls for MMIW inquiry grew after death

Calls for an inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal girls and women grew in intensity and frequency in the weeks following Fontaine'sdeath.

She had only been in Winnipeg a fewweeks after leaving her great-aunt's home on the Sagkeeng First Nation, about 70 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg.

Herfamily has said she was taken into the custody of Child and Family Services and placed in a downtown hotelbut ran away shortly before she was killed.

Police saidFontainebecame an exploited youth in the Manitoba capital and metCormierat a residence they both frequented.

With files from The Canadian Press