British Columbia

B.C. jury wants murder definitions at start of deliberations in Ibrahim Ali trial

Members of a B.C. Supreme Court jury have asked the judge in the Ibrahim Ali murder trial for a clearer definition of the differences between manslaughter and first- and second-degree murder.

Ibrahim Ali is accused of first-degree murder; defence team says it received threats over the case

An artist's courtroom sketch of a man in a dark suit wearing headphones, holding his hand to his chin.
A court sketch depicts Ibrahim Ali, who is facing a first-degree murder charge in the death of a 13-year-old Burnaby girl. (Felicity Don)

Members of a B.C. Supreme Court jury have asked the judge in the Ibrahim Ali murder trial for a clearer definition of the differences between manslaughter and first- and second-degree murder.

The question came shortly after the jury began its deliberations in the first-degree murder trial of Ali, who's accused of killing a 13-year-old girl in a Burnaby park more than six years ago.

Justice Lance Bernard has prepared a two-page answer he plans to give the jury today after both the Crown and defence have had a chance to view the response.

They jury began deliberating late yesterday after what was scheduled to be a three-month trial stretched into its ninth month.

Some details of the case can only now be reported because the jury is sequestered, including that Ali's defence team received threats, with lawyer Kevin McCullough reading out one that said his family faced "a violent and brutal death'' before Christmas.

In his instructions to the jury, Bernard told jurors the case against Ali is circumstantial, requiring them to infer that Ali raped and strangled the girl in Burnaby's Central Park in July 2017.

Bernard said Ali's lawyers argued in the alternative that there could be an "innocent explanation'' for semen matching Ali's DNA being found inside the girl as a result of an earlier encounter, and someone else later killed her and dumped the body in the park.

The girl can't be named due to a publication ban.