Pubdate: Fri, 27 May 2011 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2011 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/regina/leaderpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Barb Pacholik, Leader-Post WALKER GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER Before he left court in handcuffs following a manslaughter conviction, Kim Joseph Walker hugged his daughter, whose boyfriend he killed, and told her and other family members to "be strong." "I'll be OK," the 54-year-old husband and father told them after the verdict Thursday evening. "Everything will be alright." But for the family of the man he gunned down, the trial's outcome was far from right. "The legal system in Canada is a joke," a clearly agitated Dan Hayward, brother of the victim James Hayward, told reporters. "I'm completely disgusted right now. It just goes to show the gullibility of people. And that you can trespass in a man's house and shoot him five times in front of everybody and it doesn't matter," he said. "I'm serving a life sentence without my brother because of him," he added. Moments later Walker's wife Elizabeth told reporters, "I would just like to know where the law was to protect my daughter from a 24yearold convicted drug dealer who was a predator." It sparked an emotional outburst between both families, hurling expletives until a court official stepped in. Both sides are expected back at the courthouse today when sentencing arguments will be heard by Justice Ellen Gunn. Although Walker has been out on bail, Gunn ordered that he be taken in custody to await sentencing. Defence lawyer Balfour Der said he'll be asking that his client serve no additional time. Walker served approximately three years in prison prior to winning an appeal of his 2007 second-degree murder conviction and a new trial. Crown prosecutor Robin Ritter declined to discuss what penalty he'll seek. Walker was on trial for second-degree murder in the March 17, 2003 shooting death of 24-year-old James Hayward. Armed with a semi-automatic pistol, Walker went to Hayward's Yorkton home to retrieve his 16-year-old daughter Jadah, then a morphine addict living with Hayward, whom Walker believed was supplying her with the drugs. Walker told the jury he doesn't remember the shooting, but claimed he was afraid of Hayward and acted in self-defence -a memory loss the Crown called "too convenient." Gunn had given the jury three options: guilty of murder, guilty of manslaughter or an outright acquittal. It was clearly a difficult decision for the jurors, who began deliberations at 3 p.m. Tuesday. Around 7: 30 p.m. Thursday, they sent word that they had a verdict, having spent most of the afternoon rehearing a recording of Walker's evidence at their request. Walker's daughter Jadah told reporters the family was prepared for the worst, and hoping for the best. "This is not the worst case scenario for us," she said. Jadah said the family, less Walker, would be gathering after court "to rejoice on our slight victory and go from there. You can't turn back. You can't live life with regrets," she said. With tears streaming down her cheeks, Hayward's mother Lorrie Getty told reporters her son was "an amazing young man who made incredibly bad choices. He paid his life for them." Clutching a stuffed toy and a photo of Hayward, Getty said her son has made her brave enough to speak out. "I'm going to spend the rest of my life doing this, and telling everyone all the good things about James - -I'm so very proud to be James Hayward's mom, especially today," she said. During the trial, court heard how Walker and his wife had Jadah, who left home on her 16th birthday, committed under a mental health warrant because of her addiction. But after her release from hospital, she initially went home -then back to Hayward following a phone call from him. Walker, who picked up the phone, said Hayward told him he would make Jadah "disappear." A member of the local pistol club with military training, Walker showed up at Hayward's home. He fired all 10 rounds in his clip, shooting an unarmed Hayward five times, including one round in the back. "I feared for my life and that of my child," Walker testified. He told court he has only "flashes" of memory of the incident -"chaos" at the house, blood, an RCMP officer pointing a gun at him, and Jadah with blood on her. Ritter said he respects the jury's verdict. "They obviously worked long and hard at it. They spent approximately 30 hours deliberating." Asked if any side can claim victory, Ritter replied, "It's a tragedy for everyone, especially for James Hayward's family." Der said he was disappointed the jury didn't accept self-defence. "I'm at a loss, I can't explain," he said. "It takes a fair bit of courage and some understanding of reasonable doubt in order to come to a verdict of not guilty," said Der. Asked if the jurors possibly split the difference between murder and an outright acquittal, Der agreed it is a compromise. Only the jurors know, and Gunn reminded them that by law, they can't discuss their deliberations. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.