December 5, 2003
Accused killer faces
preliminary hearing
Mark King Jeffrey sits
quietly as evidence revealed to court
JIM
BELL
Crown lawyers John Solski
and Marion Bryant began presenting evidence in an Iqaluit courtroom Dec. 1 as
a lengthy preliminary inquiry for accused killer Mark King Jeffrey got under
way.
Jeffrey, 22, faces a charge
of first-degree murder in connection with the death of Jennifer Naglingiq, 13,
whose body was found during the first few minutes after midnight on Dec. 6,
2002, at house 2230-B in Iqaluit.
Preliminary inquiries are
held to determine whether there is enough evidence to send accused persons to
trial, and on what charges. A court order prevents the broadcast or publication
of any evidence given during Jeffrey's inquiry.
Jeffrey, who was arrested
and charged last March, wore a hooded white sweatshirt with blue shoulder panels,
and a pair of black track pants. He sat quietly throughout the proceedings,
often rocking back and forth. From time to time, he answered whispered questions
from his lawyer, Michael Chandler.
As Justice Robert Kilpatrick
heard evidence throughout Monday and Tuesday, friends and family members of
both the victim and the accused dropped in and out of the courtroom to hear
the proceedings.
The inquiry was delayed
Monday morning when Naglingiq's grieving mother, Nicotye, lost her composure
as she entered the courtroom. The proceedings resumed after a delay of about
an hour and a half.
When news of Naglingiq's
death spread throughout Iqaluit last December, the community was traumatized.
Administrators at Inuksuk
High School, where Naglingniq was a Grade 8 student, worked round the clock
after her death to provide emotional support for the school's 460 students.
Naglingniq's death overshadowed
a vigil held at Inuksuk High School to mark the 13th anniversary of the 1989
Montreal massacre, when a deranged gunman shot 14 women at L'Ecole Polytechnique.
After police arrested,
charged, and then released one man in connection with Naglingiq's death, many
residents became increasingly impatient with the RCMP's investigation into the
crime.
Jeffrey was arrested and
charged with first-degree murder in late March, and has been held in custody
since.
Kilpatrick adjourned the
inquiry on Tuesday at noon. The proceeding was to resume on the morning of Dec.
4, after certain witnesses were to have flown into Iqaluit from the South.
About two weeks of court
time have been reserved for Jeffrey's preliminary inquiry.
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