
Defence calls client’s role in machete attack minimal, not criminal
PRINCE GEORGE — The lawyer for the second man tried after a Prince George motel resident was seriously injured in an August 2022 machete attack said Friday, Jan. 31 there is no evidence his client committed break and enter or aggravated assault.
Terry La Liberté, acting for 49-year-old Kerridge Andrew Lowley, told BC Supreme Court Justice John Gibb-Carsley during the third day of closing arguments that the Crown’s case was “rife with reasonable doubt in terms of what happened in that room.”
That room was unit 255 of the Econo Lodge City Centre Inn where resident Arlen Chalifoux emerged with grisly injuries to his right arm after an altercation with Lowley’s co-accused Dakota Rayn Keewatin, 31.
La Liberté said Lowley was in the suite for a brief six or seven seconds, did not “get up close and personal” with Chalifoux and did nothing other than “check it out and apparently say ‘stop!’”