Page B16 The Castlegar Sun Wednesday, October 11, 1995 Business of the Month Firesafe Prevention Services ole Robertson, a Castlegar resident, is dedicated to making the Kootenays aware of simple ways to promote fire safety in the home, by dealing with one of the more common causes of residential fires, un-safe chimneys. Soot and creosote are dangerous substances to deal with. Equipped with precise brushes and a powerful vacuum system called the ‘Sootsweeper’ those dirty by-products will be removed safely from your home. oe How safe is your chimney? Do you have smoke and gas alarms? Extinguishers? Second storey escape ladders? GIVE YOURSELF PEACE OF MIND! Call for an inspection and cleaning today. LEbISLATIUE 4 1RROG SEGISLATIVE LIBRARY PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS VICTORIA yi CAN us SPORTS BUSINESS Weather Vol. 5, No. 48 WEDNESDAY .» Ine Castlegar Sun : commitment’ 84 Cents + G.S.T. Singin’ in the rain Soh Party turns ugly Police arrest 19-year-old after home and cruiser are damaged to break up a party at the same address which had es swelled to some 60 youth. While there, a beer bottle KAREN KERKHOFF | Sun Staff One set of Robson parents are going to return home to an unwelcome and expensive Surprise. A teenage girl who hosted a party that got out of hand now has to deal with damaged walls, stained carpets, broken furniture and a smashed window. Police say that they broke up a party of some 30 youths in the 1100 block of Marshall Road in Rob- son Oct. 13 and that the youths had damaged the home during the bash. While there RCMP recovered a beer keg which had been stolen and was intended for a wedding. The following night police were once again called was thrown at a police car resulting in the breaking of the rear window. Police say that a break and enter at the Pass Creek Fire Hall Oct. 14, in which alcohol was taken after the door was smashed in by a Pick axe, is related to the party-goers. A 19-year-old man will be with the offence, however the man’s name can't be released until formal charges are laid. Damage to the police vehicle is estimated at $750. Charges are pending and police say further charges may be laid after investigation is complete. The parents were out of town at the time of the incidents. Triple-murder trial 365-7648 j a | : | |] Roberts wanted wife committed Randy Robertson cleaning a woodstove. Bergen testified. She said she Both Susan and Josiah had or 1-800-208-2088 Superior Gutters 365-8181 | FREE ESTIMATES BOUBLE.D FREE ESTIMATES * CALL DAVE 365-3545 How SAFE is Your CHIMNEY? 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Fall’s predictably unpredictable wea ther didh’t stop Gary Schneider from on at Zuckerberg Island one day last week. rtist, admired the changing season from under SUN STAFF PHOTO/Karen Kerkhoft JODY LAMB Sterling News Service ~ NELSON — In the weeks »éTore her turder, Susan Roberts told friends that her husband wanted to have her put invan insane asylum. a Nelson Supreme Court jury heard Monday A woman who once consid- ered herself Susan's second mother, said she received three telephone calls from Susan in the month preceding the young mother's death. Francis Bergen, who hadn't spoken to Susan for about 12 years, said during one of the Phone calls Susan put down the Phone when her husband Dean came home. When Susan returned to the Phone, she was upset and crying. “She said that Dean told her that he wanted to have her com- mitted and that he said that because she had been so cranky. That he'd have her committed and get it straightened out,” tried to. calm the “frantic” woman. “LT tried to reassure her that maybe he was just upset,” she said. Bergen said Susan was worried about where the Roberts family * was going to live. She said their landlord had told them they were going to have to move out and that a house they had been Promised through a building ven- ture between Dean and his father wasn't working out. Bergen said that she prayed with Susan at the end of their last conversation, four days before the mother of three was killed. “And that’s how it ended,” she said. Susan Roberts was found mur- dered in her Cranbrook town- house on July 18, 1994 after a small fire was set in the master bedroom. Her oldest son Jonathan, 3, survived the fire. The body of one of her 13- month-old twin sons, Josiah, was found two days later. His brother, David, died on July 24 in hospital in Vancouver. TRUCKING LTD. 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COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL Over 20 years experience Quality workmanship ® Senior rates FREE ESTIMATES CALL LLOYD - 365-11 17 MICHAEL LAYCOCK Sterling News Service i " CRANBROOK — Kristian Warsing’s own lawyer said Monday he was still uncertain whether the accused double murderer would take the stand. Patrick Dearden posed the question of whether his client would testify as he opened the defence Case before a Cran- brook Supreme Court jury. His response: “I don't know yet.” Dearden said he had to balance con- flicting interests in coming to a decision. In favor of putting Warsing on the stand, he told the jury, is “Your natural desire to hear his story from his own lips. I know you want to hear it, and I don’t want to disappoint you.” Testifying would also allow Warsing to defend himself against false allegations, Dearden said. But arguments against Warsing taking the stand include Dearden’s responsibility as a defence lawyer, Warsing's isolation in jail for the past year and a half, and the Presumption of innocence, the lawyer said. “If the Crown hasn't got enough evidence, why put him on the stand?” he asked. Kristian Warsing, 20, is charged with the first-degree murders of his half-sister Shannon, eight months, and half-brother Stuart, 7, on May 27, 1994 at the family townhome in Sparwood. The two were found strangled in their home. He is also accused of attempting to kill his stepmother, Debora Warsing In laying out his case, Dearden said the Lawyer waivers over putting accused murderer on stand defence admitted Kristian attacked Debora but completely denied an attempt at murder. The real issue, Dearden said, is whether the jury can be satisfied beyond a reason- able doubt that Kristian killed the chil- dren. “That's what it's about. The only true evidence linking Kristian Warsing to the murders is Debora Warsing’s word,” and her word is not reliable, he said. “It's not going to be easy,” Dearden told the jury. “You'll never know for sure And that's what's so hard about your job. Dearden would not say how many wit- nesses he will call, but indicated the wit- nesses will likely take two or three days — several more if Kristian Warsing testifies. Nichole Warsing, 18, described her brother Kristian as a “goody two-shoes” who loved his siblings, took young Stuart fishing and never got into trouble. Two of Kristian’s former teachers, Louise Gonsalvez and Jeff Samin, said he beh been strangled with a rope. Susan‘s husband, Dean Robens, 26. is accused of the murders. Angela Roy, a friend Susan would often have long talks with, testificd Monday that two er three weeks before the murders, Susan also told her Dean wanted to have her committed. “She said that Dean was going to put her in a psychiatric ward,” Roy said. “She was very depressed. She was crying a lot and smoking a lot.” “Did she say why Dean was going to take that action,” Crown prosecutor Scott Van Alstine asked. “Because she was emotionally up and down,” Roy replied. Roy said Susan told her she would scratch herself and that it was part of working through abuse she had suffered from her brothers. Defence lawyer Georges Sourisseau suggested Susan told her Dean woud put her in a psy- chiatric ward if Susan didn’t stop scratching herself. But Roy said it was the opposite — Susan said she would scratch herself if Dean + put her in the hospital. Linda Greco testified Monday ‘ that she gave Susan a cheque for $3,355 on March 24, 1994 to help buy necessities for the fami- ly and to help pay for some of was an . 4 pe tive student who had a number of friends and a good reputation in the community. “He was one of the top five students I've had in the past 10 years,” Samin said. But the witnesses painted a much less flattering portrait of Debora Warsing. Four said they doubted her honesty and would not believe sworn testimony given by her in court. “She had a poor reputation,” both in the ity and as a mother, Gonsalvez said. Dearden called five wi Ss Mi ry to testify to the character of Kristian and Debora Warsing. “They (Debora's Scout leader colleagues) found her to be extremely overpowering.” Residents vow to re-open school KAREN KERKHOFF Sun Staff dren into town had their schooling in rural settings. These Peoples origins began here and are still here.” Pass Creek residents are determined to see their school, which has been sitting vacant for some 10 y opened In a written submission to the Castlegar School board, Leeza Soukoroff wrote on behalf of the newly formed Pass Creek Parent Association Commitice about t opening the vacant school. “Many of the parents who are now sendi For all your local news and sports — The Castlegar Sun ‘cars Now, re- children in that i he validity of ing their chil- gar schools { Soukoroff also wrote about the rapid population growth in Pass Creek, which she claims, now negates the reason for the school being closed. A group of Pass Creek resi- dents have conducted a headcount of children ages from newborn to 12 and have estimated that there are some 118 group in the area. She also cites the current need for children to awake are a.m. in order to catch the bus which carries them to Castle- Larissa Plomikoff was raised in Pass Creek and attended Pass Creek school for six years. She says she also wants to see the school re-opened. “I's very imponant for us to have the school open for educational and spiritual reasons. There's a more personal feeling in a rural education system and the children will be able to go to school in Pass Creek where they live.” Plotnikoff says that there is still a deep loss felt in the conimunity by the closure of the school See SCHOOL A2 "s hospital bills. She added, between March and the time of the murders, she gave Susan money three or four more times, but the Roberts’ financial difficulties never improved. She said she remembered Susan telling her they were $20,000 in debt and sometimes couldn't afford to buy milk or diapers. Dean Roberts has pleaded inno- cent to three charges of first- degree murder. The trial continues. 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