Red Deer Advocate, March 04, 2016

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Lindsay’s fate in hands of judge

Indiscriminate and unforgiving SNARES TAKING A DEADLY TOLL ON WILDLIFE IN THE SUNDRE AREA

THREE-WEEK MURDER TRIAL WRAPS UP BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF

MARY-ANN BARR BARRSIDE Two golden eagles and 15 cougars were caught in trappers’ snares in the Sundre area recently. The problem is the traps that caught them had actually been set for wolves. The cougars were all killed. Despite efforts to save the mated eagles, the female died Tuesday, and it is not certain yet if the male will survive. The trouble with snares is that they don’t discriminate when it comes to what gets caught in them, and they can be inhumane, says Dwight Rodtka. The former animal predator control specialist for Alberta Agriculture, who lives near Rocky Mountain House, was on the job 38 years before retiring in 2012. He participated in a recent scientific research paper on snaring. “The bottom line is snares are inhumane and to date we haven’t seen any modification or any changes that would make them humane. And they have a secondary problem in that they are not target-selective at all, meaning that they catch everything,” said Rodtka. Wolf and coyote trappers generally put out draw bait, and will set from 50 to as high as 200 snares around it, he said. “Consequently any moose, deer, elk, cougar, bear, pet, anything that comes by there is very apt to get caught, and of course that includes eagles that feed on carrion to some degree as these two down by Sundre were.”

See SNARE on Page A7

Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff

Brittany Ginter, hospital co-ordinator with the Medicine River Wildlife Centre, works with a golden eagle that was caught in snare in Central Alberta. The adult male, which was caught in a snare with an adult female golden eagle, arrived at the wildlife centre on Feb. 21. The female died Tuesday. The male suffered damage to its wing, while the female was caught with the snare around its neck.

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Mark Damien Lindsay’s clear mental illness, gestating for years led, him to murder Dana Turner, his defence counsel said to close out the trial. But the Crown said his actions around the time of the offence show he had the capacity to make a rational choice. Closing arguments brought the three-week trial to its near conclusion Thursday in Red Deer Court of Queen’s bench. Defence counsel Kent Teskey said Lindsay was profoundly ill in 2011 when the murder occurred and his schizophrenia can be traced back to its early stages in 2005. Lindsay has admitted to killing Turner, 31, by stabbing her in the eyes with a pencil, strangling her and running her over with a car. He believed Turner was a member of a group of serial killers called Healers and was sent by them to kill him. In August 2011, he was just out of jail after serving a 50-day sentence for stabbing Turner in the face with a knife. Within days of his release, he killed Turner. The main trial issue was whether or not Lindsay could be held criminally responsible for the murder. Crown Prosecutor Ed Ring said Lindsay made many rational decisions after he killed Lindsay including: driving to Walmart to get a blanket to cover Turner’s body, going to his parent’s house to get his resumé and welding documents, going to his brother’s home, going to a TD bank to take out some money and going to a Rona to get a shovel and other items aimed at concealing his intention of burying Turner’s body. Relying on his two experts and their testimony, Teskey said Lindsay was actively psychotic “in a profound way” for a decade.

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