Surrey 6 Murder Convict Loses Another B.C. Supreme Court Application
BRITISH COLUMBIA, JUL 22 – The court rejected allegations of police and Crown misconduct in the 2007 Surrey Six murders, allowing prosecution evidence including 210 hours of security footage to be used, Justice ruled.
- On February 20, 2025, Justice Martha Devlin denied Cody Rae Haevischer's application to cross-examine nine defence witnesses in a B.C. Supreme Court hearing in New Westminster.
- Haevischer requested to halt the legal process, alleging abuse of process related to his 2007 Surrey Six murder case.
- The 2007 incident involved the shooting of six people in suite 1505 of Balmoral Tower in Whalley, reportedly as payback for a gang debt, with two victims being innocent bystanders.
- Justice Devlin described the cross-examination request as “premature” and stated that 14 videos from June 2009 surveillance are probative, dismissing Haevischer's bid to block Crown use of 210 hours of security footage.
- The ruling maintains Haevischer’s conviction, upheld in January 2021 by the B.C. Court of Appeal, and the evidentiary hearing, begun on November 4, 2024, continues to address allegations against police and Crown conduct.
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