Pubdate: Fri, 12 Mar 2010 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www2.canada.com/calgaryherald/letters.html Website: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Daryl Slade, Calgary Herald HALLUCINOGENIC DRUG BLAMED IN SLAYING It was only in the middle of raping Arcelie Laoagan, an act over which he says he felt powerless, that it suddenly occurred to Christopher Watcheston what he was doing. "I stopped because it was so wrong," Watcheston told Crown prosecutor Christine Rideout under cross-examination Thursday. "I got back control. That's why I stopped." Despite Watcheston's sudden realization of his obvious criminal transgression, minutes later, he nevertheless killed Laoagan by kicking her in the head about four times with the rubber sole of his steel-toed ironworker boots. He then fled and attempted to destroy evidence. That, he said, he did only because he believed she was calling 911 and he didn't want to get in trouble. But, he added, there was no intention to kill. He blamed it on the effect of the hallucinogenic drug salvia, which caused him to have essentially an out-of-body experience that left him powerless to stop. "I thought police could be coming. I wasn't going to stick around to find out," Watcheston said, alluding to the victim being on the cellphone during and after the attack. "I thought people got hit in the head, got a concussion and don't remember." Watcheston, on trial for first-degree murder in connection with the sexual assault and slaying of the 41-year-old mother of five, has admitted committing the crime, but is trying to reduce his charge to second-degree murder. The slaying occurred on Jan. 17, 2008, on a pathway between the Franklin C-Train station and adjacent Grace Baptist Church. When Rideout suggested Watcheston planned the attack despite being drunk -- perhaps as soon as when he left after drinking beer with co-workers after work -- he flatly denied it. "I never decided when I left (coworker) Charlotte Cummer's house I was gonna go rape and beat up some chick on my way home from work," Watcheston retorted. "I wasn't planning on none of this. It was not a plan. Like, I would never formulate a plan and decide to go out and do this." Watcheston had boarded the train at the 8th Street station downtown, where Laoagan also boarded to go home after work. They both got off at the Franklin station. On Wednesday, Watcheston testified he mistook Laoagan for his dead mother, who had been murdered in Regina a decade ago. It was then that he alleges Laoagan suddenly took his mistaken identity as a threat. He claims she then repeatedly pleaded with him not to rape her. Watcheston said he tried to explain to her that he merely thought she looked like his mother and not to worry. Watcheston said it was a reaction to the hallucinogenic drug salvia that caused him to "trip out" shortly before he attacked her. He said he had twice ingested the drug that night, along with more than a dozen beer and a half-mickey of Southern Comfort liquor. He also said he did not stalk her from when they both boarded the train downtown. He said he didn't even notice her until the Franklin station, and only then because of her resemblance to his mother. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake