British Columbia

Boyfriend sentenced to life in prison for murder of Ashley Simpson

The boyfriend of slain Salmon Arm, B.C., woman Ashley Simpson has been sentenced to life in prison, with no chance of parole for 12 years, after pleading guilty to second-degree murder.

Derek Favell had pleaded guilty to 2nd-degree murder in the death of Simpson, who went missing in 2016

A woman with crutches, wearing a hoodie with a woman's face on it, is pictured in the background of a person wearing a T-shirt close to the camera.
Family members of Ashley Simpson, who travelled to Salmon Arm, B.C., from Ontario, are pictured outside the courtroom where her killer was sentenced on Wednesday. (Tom Popyk/CBC)

The boyfriend of slain Salmon Arm, B.C., woman Ashley Simpson has been sentenced to life in prison, with no chance of parole for 12 years, after pleading guilty to second-degree murder.

Derek Favell was sentenced on Wednesday afternoon after pleading guilty to the killing last October.

In 2016, Simpson, 32, went missing from a rural property near Salmon Arm — a southern Interior community around 75 kilometres east of Kamloops, B.C. — where she was living with Favell, her boyfriend at the time. 

Her remains were discovered in a wooded area outside Salmon Arm in late 2021, and Favell was charged with second-degree murder a week later.

Photo of Ashley Simpson looking at the camera and smiling. She is wearing a ball cap on her head with sunglasses on the top of the rim.
Ashley Simpson vanished from the Salmon Arm area in April 2016. Her family spent five years looking for her organizing ground and drone searches. The RCMP located her remains in 2021. (Ashley Simpson/Facebook)

Justice Alison Beames announced the sentence in a Salmon Arm courtroom on Wednesday after Simpson's father and mother read out victim impact statements detailing how their daughter was taken in a "brutal and senseless killing."

Simpson was far away from her family in St. Catharines, Ont., when she was killed in 2016. Favell dumped her body down a slope, the court heard. Her remains were found after Favell confessed the crime to an undercover officer.

"As a family, we shed enough tears to fill a lake," Cindy Simpson, Ashley's mother, told the courtroom.

"She was the one bright light in my life, and now it has dimmed."

Two people — a woman wearing a blue T-shirt and a man wearing a red hoodie, both of them with a woman's face on their top — are pictured outside a building marked 'Law Courts'.
Cindy Simpson, left, and John Simpson, right, spoke to CBC News about how devastating the loss of their daughter was for their family. (Tom Popyk/CBC)

Simpson was one of five women reported missing in the North Okanagan-Shuswap region between 2016 and 2017 — a fact that, along with consistent awareness efforts from her family, kept her story in the media over the years despite little word of progress from RCMP investigators. 

According to Ashley's father, John Simpson, in spring 2016, she told her family in Ontario that she was planning to hitchhike back to her home province. 

But she never arrived — and her parents told CBC News how they always hoped that one day she would walk through the door unharmed. Then, news came of her remains being discovered in November 2021.

"It's so unfair," Cindy told CBC News. "When people do things like this, I don't care if it's in a fit of rage, whatever ... [they should] call right away, saying, 'Oh my God, look what I did.'

"Then, the children, people, have time to heal. The longer you go searching for your loved one, it takes longer to heal."

Confession obtained through 'Mr. Big' operation

The court heard how police had suspected foul play in Simpson's disappearance and began a "Mr. Big" sting operation targeting Favell, 41, in the fall of 2020.

The Mr. Big sting operation involves Mounties concocting a fake crime operation and involving a suspect. The court heard how Favell was "eager" to join the quasi-criminal organization and helped out whenever it asked.

After the operation began, Favell gave an undercover RCMP officer a detailed confession of the crime. In court on Wednesday, prosecutors said that the killing came after the couple had a fight.

Ashley Simpson is playing the guitar and looking at the camera
Ashley Simpson disappeared in 2016 shortly after she told her family in Ontario that she was planning to hitchhike back to her home province. (Rose Simpson)

In his confession, the court heard, Favell said he punched Ashley while they fought when his girlfriend told him he was going to jail. He then strangled her and dumped her body off his truck near a forest service road the next day.

In a letter that he read out in court, the killer apologized for the pain he had caused Simpson's family — and said that he had had a troubled upbringing, which led to issues with substance dependence later in his life.

He said that the killing of Simpson came in a burst of anger and said he wants to recover and rehabilitate in jail.

A life sentence is mandatory for those found guilty of second-degree murder. Justice Beames said that Favell had no prior criminal record, and pleaded guilty to the crime only after his confession to undercover officers was accepted as evidence.

However, she said that the fact the killing was a result of domestic violence and that Favell took deliberate steps to hide Simpson's body and destroy evidence were aggravating factors in her sentencing decision. 

A close up photo of Ashley Simpson, who is looking towards the camera with a slight smile her face. She has shoulder length, brown hair and brown eyes and nose piercing.
Ashley Simpson's remains were located in 2021, five years after she went missing. Her boyfriend Derek Favell was charged with second-degree murder. (Ashley Simpson/Facebook)

"The victim impact statements show [what] a heart-rending and clearly devastating effect her loss has had in the family," Beames said.

"Those statements made clear how loved Ashley Simpson was by family and friends, and how big a hole her absence leaves."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Akshay Kulkarni

Journalist

Akshay Kulkarni is an award-winning journalist who has worked at CBC British Columbia since 2021. Based in Vancouver, he is most interested in data-driven stories. You can email him at akshay.kulkarni@cbc.ca.

With files from Brady Strachan