Woman sentenced to life in prison for 1st-degree murder of St. Albert senior
CBC
A woman who stabbed and beat a St. Albert man to death, then moved his body in a storage bin before dumping it in a rural area, was sentenced Thursday to life in prison.
In June, a jury found 34-year-old Beryl Musila guilty of first-degree murder in the 2017 death of Ronald Worsfold, 75.
The conviction carries an automatic life sentence without eligibility for parole for 25 years. But Musila will have six years credited to that period because she has been in custody since her arrest in July 2017. She will become eligible for parole in about 19 years.
Musila was also sentenced to 2½ years for indecent interference with human remains, to be served concurrently.
In his sentencing decision, Court of King's Bench Justice Larry Ackerl noted that Musila had multiple diagnosed mental health issues, and was struggling with a drug addiction at the time.
But, he said: "She took multiple and deliberate steps calculated to hide her involvement in the murder. She's highly morally blameworthy."
Outside the Edmonton Law Courts Thursday, Worsfold's daughter said it's a relief to see the conclusion of the case.
"I remember him every morning when the blue jays come to get their peanuts. I remember him every time we have a thunderstorm, because we used to sit on his balcony and watch the lightning," Stacey Worsfold said.
"His memory is so many places that we visit on a daily basis."
At the time of the murder, Musila was a tenant in the apartment building Worsfold managed, and had moved into his unit.
Crown prosecutors Patricia Hankinson and John Schmidt argued that the evidence showed Musila drugged Worsfold with Ativan and then panicked, fearing he'd overdosed.
They said Musila then decided to kill Worsfold by stabbing him with a knife and beating him with a hammer. She put his body in a storage tub and moved it several times before leaving it on a rural property.
Musila's evidence was that someone else killed Worsfold and that she was set up to take the blame. She admitted to the indecent interference with human remains charge, which was related to transporting Worsfold's body.
She made several claims about the night of Worsfold's death, including that she caught an unknown person breaking into the apartment suite, and that someone else removed bloody sheets and clothing from the scene where the older man was killed while she was asleep.