Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jan 2007
Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN)
Copyright: 2007 The StarPhoenix
Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400
Author: James Wood, The StarPhoenix

WALKER NO HERO: SHOOTING VICTIM'S BROTHER

Jury in Walker Trial Fails to Come to Decision

YORKTON -- As jury deliberations in the first-degree murder trial of
Kim Walker ended after a second day with no verdict, the brother of
victim James Hayward expressed disgust and sadness that Walker has
been celebrated in some corners while his brother has been demonized.

The trial has attracted national attention as the defence has
portrayed Walker as a father desperate to rescue his then 16-year-old
daughter Jadah from a drug addiction when he went to Hayward's home
and shot and killed him on March 17, 2003.

Hayward, believed by police to be selling marijuana, was Jadah's
boyfriend and the two lived together.

"I think it's despicable the way that this community has tried to turn
Kim Walker into some kind of smalltown hero for executing my brother
when he was trespassing in his home," Hayward's younger brother Danny,
22, told a horde of reporters on the Yorkton courthouse steps shortly
before the jury broke for the evening.

With friends and family members including his mother and father behind
him, Danny Hayward said his brother -- at one time an award-winning
bodybuilder -- was a kind person who never forced anything on anyone.

"All of the memories I have left are tainted by memories of what
happened to him because of Kim Walker," said Danny Hayward, who lives
in Edmonton.

The jury began its deliberations just before noon on Wednesday after
Justice Jennifer Pritchard directed them to find a minimum verdict of
manslaughter for Walker, who has admitted causing Hayward's death but
said he did not intend to kill him.

Continuing from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday with only breaks for lunch
and supper, the eight-woman, four-man jury is deliberating whether or
find Walker guilty of manslaughter -- where there is no intent to kill
- -- or first or second-degree murder.

"No matter what verdict comes back, it's not going to change the fact
that I'm an only child now," said Danny Hayward.

The wait is a strain on both the Hayward and Walker families, who stay
in separate areas at the Yorkton courthouse while the lobby is filled
with media and the simply curious.

Defence attorney Morris Bodnar said Walker and his family are coping
with the wait for a verdict.

"My client's been waiting four years. These hours aren't easy but it
isn't much different."

Walker's daughter Jadah broke her silence this week, telling CBC in a
brief statement Wednesday night that she owed her life to her parents.

"I'm very thankful and lucky that I have parents that care as much as
they do, otherwise I wouldn't be here today," she said.

Kim Walker has said he remembers only "flashes" and nothing of the
actual shooting.

While the family had been concerned about Jadah's behavior and health
for months, the shooting occurred shortly after Walker and his wife
received an anonymous letter in March of 2003 saying that Jadah and
Hayward were injecting morphine.

On the advice of the RCMP, they sought and received from a provincial
court judge a Mental Health Act warrant committing Jadah to Yorkton
hospital's psychiatric ward for a weekend assessment of her drug problem.

On the Monday Jadah was released, friends picked her up from her
parents' home and reunited her with Hayward.

The court has heard that Walker then went to Hayward's home with a
Luger M80 semi-automatic pistol. After asking a resistant Jadah to
come home, Walker shot Hayward in front of his daughter and other witnesses.

Hayward bled to death in the front room of his house after being shot
five times by Walker, once in the back at close range.

There is much at stake in what the jury decides.

First-degree murder carries a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment,
with first eligibility for parole in 25 years. Second-degree murder
also carries mandatory life imprisonment but the judge can set
eligibility for parole between 10 and 25 years.

Sentencing for manslaughter is determined by the judge, but
manslaughter using a firearm requires a mandatory minimum sentence of
four years imprisonment. 
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