Former B.C. lawyer who stabbed client to death is found guilty of first-degree murder
After former Kamloops, B.C., lawyer Rogelio (Butch) Bagabuyo stole almost $800,000 from a client, stabbed him to death and then smuggled the body out of his office in a plastic tote, he tried to explain the killing as unplanned.
But B.C. Supreme Court Justice Kathleen Ker said in a ruling handed down Tuesday in Kamloops that she had no doubt the killing on March 11, 2022, was planned and deliberate, as she convicted Bagabuyo of first-degree murder.
She said “it defies logic, common sense and human experience” that the stabbing of Mohd Abdullah, a lecturer at Thompson Rivers University, could have been spontaneous. Ker described preparatory steps that included Bagabuyo emailing Abdullah on March 1 to set up the meeting, writing a to-do list on a cue-card, and purchasing a “decoy tote” in the days leading up to the killing.
Ker outlined a series of actions Bagabuyo had to carry out in the two hours between Abdullah walking into the office and the then-lawyer walking out with tote.


