Convicted murderer wants B.C. Supreme Court to throw out case over delays
VANCOUVER — A man convicted of first-degree murder in a killing police have said was linked to organized crime has asked British Columbia Supreme Court to throw out the case, arguing that delays in the process violated his Charter rights.
Prosecutors argued that Brandon Teixeira — who was convicted by a jury of murder, attempted murder and discharging a firearm with intent to endanger life last August — was partly responsible for the delays after going on the run in the United States after fleeing police in a chase that involved a helicopter.
“You’re not allowed to abscond, evade arrest, disappear, you know, in a foreign country, with a fake name, and then have that time period count toward delay,” Crown lawyer Dianne Wiedemann said at a hearing on Monday.
Teixiera’s lawyer, Vicki Williams, told the hearing over the so-called Jordan application that apart from two periods of time, including her client’s flight to the U.S., no delays were attributable solely to his defence team.


