Toronto

Defence draws attention to other man at Kalen Schlatter murder trial

Lawyers for a Toronto man accused of strangling a young woman more than two years ago are drawing attention to another man seen in the area that night.

The Crown alleges Schlatter sexually assaulted and then strangled victim Tess Richey

Kalen Schlatter has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the death of Tess Richey. (Facebook)

Lawyers for a Toronto man accused of strangling a young woman more than two years ago are drawing attention to another man seen in the area that night.

Defence lawyers for Kalen Schlatter are raising questions about a man dressed in a hooded winter coat and light pink trucker hat who also appears in some security videos from the area where Tess Richey was last seen on Nov. 25, 2017.

They are cross-examining a Toronto police homicide detective who reviewed hours of footage from a number of security cameras as part of the investigation into Richey's death.

The 22-year-old woman was found dead in a stairwell in Toronto's Church and Wellesley area days after she failed to return from a night out with a friend.

Schlatter was arrested months later and has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder.

Prosecutors allege he sexually assaulted and killed Richey, a woman he had just met, after she rejected his advances.

Jurors have spent several days watching security videos taken that night at a number of locations in the neighbourhood, including a club where Schlatter, Richey and her friend Ryley Simard spent part of the evening.

The two women did not interact with Schlatter inside the club but Simard can be seen speaking to him briefly outside after all three left the venue.

On Thursday, court saw footage that showed Schlatter and Richey walking together at 4:14 a.m., heading into an alley towards the area where her body was found.

The video shows Schlatter come out of the alley alone roughly 45 minutes later.

The officer who examined the video, Det. Stephen Matthews, told the court he watched for at least two hours after that and did not see anyone going to or from that area, nor did he see Richey emerge.

Court previously heard from an undercover police officer who said Schlatter confided in him about going into a secluded area with Richey to "hook up." Schlatter said he left Richey alone — and alive — after she refused to have sex, the officer testified.

Prosecutors have said an expert will testify that Schlatter's DNA was found on Richey's pants and inside her bra.