|
November 1, 2002
Baker man jailed 12 years
for brutal beating death
Worst beating case hes
seen in 23 years, judge says
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Jeremy Kuuk, 30, of Baker
Lake was sentenced to 12 years in jail last week after pleading guilty to manslaughter
in the brutal beating death of another Baker Lake man in 2001.
Samuel Nagyougalik, 40,
died Oct. 2, 2001 in Baker Lake after Kuuk punched and kicked him to death in
a fight over a liquor bottle.
"This is a very good
sentence from the Crowns perspective. Its a serious sentence for
manslaughter, but it fits very well with the facts," said Crown lawyer
John Solski.
Solski said the two men
met along a road near Baker Lakes Arctic College building in the early
morning hours Oct. 2. Both had been drinking, he said.
The men began fighting
over a liquor bottle, he said, and Kuuk laid into Nagyougalik for 20 to 30 minutes.
"Kuuk pounded [Nagyougalik]
a number of times in the head. When the victim fell to the ground, Kuuk continued
beating him with in excess of 10 kicks to the head," Solski said.
Police found Nagyougaliks
disfigured, lifeless body along the side of the road at around 3:30 a.m, and
arrested Kuuk less than 24 hours later.
Defence lawyer Michael
Chandler did not dispute the facts.
Crime scene photos by Cpl.
Harry Harding, an RCMP forensic identification specialist, were admitted as
evidence. Police statements from three witnesses were used to piece together
the evenings events.
Solski said that Judge
Rene Foisy said in court that "in his 23 years on the bench, this was the
most brutal beating hed seen."
Kuuk was originally charged
with second degree murder, but the Crown accepted a guilty plea to the lesser
charge of manslaughter.
Kuuks criminal record,
which includes an aggravated assault conviction in 1999, was admitted as evidence.
"His record and the
brutality of the beating were aggravating factors," Solski said.
Family members of the victim
and the accused attended the Oct. 29 sentencing, Solski said.
|