Shes got a huge gash on her head. A husband and father suddenly under suspicion. We are crying. Three daughters standby their dad and when prosecutors stand firm. Hes holding his wife under the water. Was it murder . Hello, welcome to dateline extra, i am craig melvin. In this story, straight out of an Alfred Hitchcocks film. A young woman pearcsees somethir a few seconds of a man and woman of something unsettling, was it a crime or even a murder . What she saw and what she did would set a motion a chain of events that would divide the family and the jurors. Here is keith moore. We know the truth and everything that happened. It is mostly unsatisfying to not have that answer. Even if we have seen something or if we think we have and thats the question of the ha heart of the whole puzzle. Is this woman right . I know what i saw. I know the conclusion of the story. Of course, she does. Of course, she does. Why does this other woman think this . Shes not sure. Why dont we begin here, cali
Sampson s defence lawyer called the Crown s case "very circumstantial" and asked the judge to acquit his client, adding, "There is no evidence Mr. Sampson caused the death of Tracy Reid."
Nearly a decade after the New Brunswick government fired Margaret-Ann Blaney from her position as head of the now defunct Energy Efficiency New Brunswick, lawyers for Blaney and for the province continue to argue - this time in provincial appeals court - over whether an inquiry into her dismissal should be allowed.
A judge has dismissed the New Brunswick government's application to stop a labour board inquiry into the firing of Margaret-Ann Blaney from her role as CEO of the defunct Crown agency known as Energy Efficiency N.B.
A lawyer with the provincial government is arguing that legislation protects it from any administrative body or judge from weighing in on the firing of Margaret-Ann Blaney, who was fired from her role as CEO of the now-defunct Energy Efficiency New Brunswick.