Duct tape and blood: Constable describes death scene at B.C. double murder trial
ABBOTSFORD — A murder trial has heard that Arnold and Joanne De Jong hosted a “joyful” family celebration at their Abbotsford, B.C., home, on May 8, 2022, with a family member later telling police they were “alive and well” when she left at 10 p.m.
But Crown prosecutor Dorothy Tsui said that the next day, the De Jongs were found dead in their beds, in separate rooms.
Abbotsford Police Const. Andre Nadeau, one of the first officers called to the home after Joanne De Jong’s body was initially discovered by a son-in-law, testified that the couples’ hands and feet were bound similarly with rope.
A large amount of blood was around Joanne De Jong’s head and neck, with blood spatter on the wall. In the other room, her husband’s head and face, including his nose and mouth, had been wrapped in duct tape that appeared to have been “put on tightly with force,” Nadeau said.


