Gang member guilty in Haiart killing - Action News
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Manitoba

Gang member guilty in Haiart killing

A Winnipeg jury has found a 24-year-old Philippine man guilty of the killing of a bystander caught in the crossfire of a violent drug dispute between two street gangs.
Bullet holes remain in the side of a now-closed restaurant's patio near where Phil Haiart, 17, was fatally shot in October 2005. ((James Turner/CBC))
A Winnipeg jury has found a 24-year-old Philippine manguiltyof the killing of an innocent bystander caught in the crossfire of a violent drug dispute between twostreet gangs.

Jeff Cansanay wasconvicted Thursday evening of second-degree murder and three counts of discharging a firearm with intent to wound in the shooting death of Phil Haiart, the son of a city doctor.

He was acquitted of two counts of attempted murder.

Haiart, 17, died of a gunshot wound to the stomach after he was shot near the intersection of Sargent Avenue and Maryland Street on the night of Oct. 10, 2005.

The five-woman, seven-man jurybelieved that Cansanay fired shots intended forgang members outside a home at606 McGee St. in the city's West End.The bullets missed their intended targets butonestruck Haiart.

A man who was walking with Haiart at the time was also injured.

Jurorsbegan deliberating at 4:40 p.m. CT Wednesday and returned a verdict by 8:50 p.m. Thursday. The trialbegan March 18.

Cansanaysat stone-facedas the verdict was announced. One of his family members cried softly shortly afterthe decision was read.

The verdict concludes what was Cansanay's second trial. His first in 2007 collapsed after witnesses refused to testify. A judge acquitted him after the Crown was not allowed to show jurors videotapedstatements witnesses had made to policethatimplicated Cansanay.

Theacquittal was overturned by the ManitobaCourt of Appeal. Cansanay's appeal of that decision went all the way to the Supreme Court before it was quashed.

Gang war over drugs

Theunderpinning of theCrown's case was that mounting tensions betweenWinnipeg's African Mafia and Mad Cowzgangs led to the shooting.

Just months before Haiart was killed, some members of the Mad Cowz split to form the African Mafia because of an internal leadership dispute.

Jeff Cansanay, 24, was found guilty of murder Thursday in the shooting of Phil Haiart nearly five years ago. ((Winnipeg police))
Anger erupted when a member of the Mad Cowz left and began buying crack from an African Mafia source and sold the drugs to customers out of the McGee Street home where Cansanay lived.

The two gangs were battling for drug turf in the city's West End. The home on McGee Street was the scene of two gang-related shootings and a firebombing in the days prior to Haiart's death. Police said they were never notified of the violence taking place there.

The Crown called several current and former high-ranking members of the Mad Cowz to the witness stand, but only one of themsaid they remembered anything about the night they were shot at.

Gharib Abdullah a parolee currently facing deportation from Canada for prior convictions testified he and another Mad Cowz gang member, Cory Amyotte, went to the McGee Street home where they were confronted outside by Cansanay and a teen named Corey Spence.

Cansanay, he said, was carrying a rifle.

Abdullah said shots were fired, but he and Amyotte fled so quickly that he couldn't be certain who pulled the trigger.

Abdullahwas the onlywitness who placed a weapon in Cansanay's hands.

Amyotte also took the stand but maintained he wasn't at the crime scene. Jurors were then shown a video of his police statement where he implicated Cansanay.

Deportation likely

Spence was convicted of second-degree murder in 2007 for his role in Haiart's killing and was sentenced as an adult to life in prison without eligibility for parole for seven years.

Cansanay's murder conviction means he's facing a mandatory sentence life in prison without parole eligibilityfor at least 10 years. A sentencing hearing will be held later this year.

As a permanent resident who immigrated to Canada from the Philippines in 1994, Cansanay also faces deportation after his sentence expires.

He isalready fighting a deportation orderissued after a prior conviction. Immigration proceedings begin again in May.

Crown witness 'a violent liar': defence

In his closing statementon Thursday, defence lawyer Greg Brodsky urged the jury to dismiss Abdullah's testimony, saying it wasn't credible.

'Lying comes easy to these people.' Defence lawyer Greg Brodsky

Jurorsheard that Abdullah and Amyotte were convicted of contempt of court after refusing to testify at Cansanay's first trial.

Amyotte washanded a four-year prison term, Abdullah served three years.

The two were acquitted last summer on charges of obstructing justice, but the Crown is appealing that decision.

Abdullah only testified at the latesttrial in hopes of staving off deportation and further jail time, Brodsky alleged.

"He told the story that the Crown wants you to hear," Brodsky said, calling Abdullah "a violent liar when it suits him."

"Lying comes easy to these people," the veteran lawyer said.

Mistrial denied

Jurors never heard that the second trialwas in danger of fallingapart after Crownattorney Gerry Bowering mentioned Spence's murder conviction in a question heasked a witness during the trial's third week.

Brodsky immediately asked for a mistrial and arguedduring a lengthy voir dire that Bowering's statement tainted the jurors' ability to judge the evidence impartially.

A voir direisa session wherejurors are removed from the court and lawyers ask for rulings on motions,evidence and otherlegal procedures in their absence.

But Justice Shawn Greenberg disagreed and denied Brodsky's request, saying that a strong caution to the jury to notconsider the lawyers' statements or questions as evidence would be enough to steer them away from tainting the trial's outcome.

Greenberg said the comment "happened so fast" that she didn't even hear it. "It happened ... in a split second," she said.

A mistrial would only have been declaredas a last resort, she said in her ruling.