WARNING: This article contains disturbing content.
A justice decided Friday that the Edmonton man found guilty of second-degree murder in the 2020 death of a seven-year-old girl won’t be eligible for parole for 15 years.
David Michael Moss faced an automatic life sentence for killing Bella Rose Desrosiers, the daughter of his high school friend Melissa Desrosiers.
The Crown argued Moss should not be eligible for parole for between 20 and 22 years. The defence suggested 13 years of parole ineligibility.
3:36
Edmonton homicide victim Bella Rose Desrosiers’ mother shares grief
Court previously heard Melissa, a nurse, had been trying to help Moss, who she feared was suicidal.
Before the attack, Moss said he was trying to ascend to another realm and was experiencing an “awakening.”
The email you need for the day’s
top news stories from Canada and around the world.
Moss admitted to killing Bella but said he had no memory of it.
A judge previously denied his defence of being not criminally responsible (NCR) for stabbing the child to death with scissors in her Mill Woods home in front of her mother and little sister in May 2020. Bella’s mother Melissa tried to fight him off, court heard, and told her other daughter, who was four at the time, to run and hide in the bathroom.
More to come…
2:06
Lemonade Stand to honour Bella Desrosiers
© 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
