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Melissa
TODOROVIC
Todorovic signed the appeal documents on Aug. 26,
about a month after she was sentenced, and the documents were filed
Oct. 15 at the Ontario Court of Appeal.
The day Todorovic was sentenced, her trial lawyer
Marshall Sack said his client would appeal her conviction.
Rengel was lured from her home on New Year's Day
2008 by Todorovic's then 17-year-old boyfriend, David Bagshaw, who
pleaded guilty to stabbing the 14-year-old girl six times and leaving
her to die in a snowbank.
Bagshaw was also handed a life sentence with no
chance of parole for 10 years.
Nordheimer had described Todorovic as the "puppet
master" in the murder and gave her the maximum sentence for
first-degree murder committed by someone under 16 at the time of the
offence.
The court heard how she mistakenly viewed Rengel,
who had been in a brief and non-sexual relationship with Bagshaw when
she was 12, as her romantic rival.
Todorovic "engaged in an unrelenting campaign over
many months to cause the death of a 14-year-old girl that she had
never met," Nordheimer said during Todorovic's sentencing on July 28.
She placed "relentless pressure" on Bagshaw through
instant messages, text messages and Facebook messages threatening to
withhold sex from him if he didn't kill Rengel.
Sack had maintained that Todorovic was less
culpable than Bagshaw because he was the one who actually stabbed
Rengel, but Nordheimer disagreed.
"Put simply, the puppet master is not less
blameworthy than the puppet," he told the court. "Indeed, I would
suggest that the master is more culpable."
Nordheimer also sentenced Bagshaw, now 19, calling
Rengel's stabbing a "truly evil" act.
The court heard how Bagshaw went to Rengel's home
the night of the murder and lured her outside, then stabbed her with
an eight-inch kitchen knife and left her to die.
He disposed of the knife and his bloodstained
jacket at a friend's house, phoned Todorovic to "report the success of
his mission," then went to her house to collect his "reward" – sex,
Nordheimer said.
"I accept that David was the more reluctant of the
two partners in this evil endeavour, but that does not change the fact
that he knowingly and actively participated in it," the judge said
during Bagshaw's sentencing on Sept. 28.
"Melissa may have given the orders but it was David
who carried them out.
Rengel's murderer sentenced to life
Melissa Todorovic sentenced as adult for pushing
boyfriend to kill perceived rival
CBC.ca
July 28, 2009
A 17-year-old girl was sentenced as an adult
Tuesday in Toronto to life in prison for her part in the murder of
Stefanie Rengel.
Melissa Todorovic
was convicted earlier this year of first-degree murder in the slaying
of the 14-year-old on New Year's Day 2008 outside her East York home.
Throughout her trial, Todorovic could only be
referred to by her initials because her identity was protected under
the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
The decision to sentence her as an adult means the
teen's name can now be made public.
Justice Ian Nordheimer ruled that Todorovic will
not be eligible to apply for parole for seven years.
Todorovic wore a black T-shirt and her dark hair
loose across her shoulders for her sentencing appearance, a marked
contrast from her trial when she wore neat cardigans and her hair tied
in a pony tail.
The court was packed with onlookers — so many
people that some had to stand.
After the sentence was passed, one person in the
courtroom clapped, just once. Todorovic's mother, brother and
grandmother started to sob while members of Rengel's family silently
cried.
As the 17-year-old was led from the courtroom in
handcuffs, her eyes were filled with tears.
Rengel was stabbed six times and left to die in a
snowbank by a male juvenile who cannot be named and is only known
outside the court by the initials D.B.
D.B. pleaded guilty to first-degree murder charges
earlier this year and is awaiting sentencing.
The Crown is also
seeking an adult sentence in that case.
The judge said the central question he had to deal
with in making his decision was whether a youth sentence would be
sufficient length to hold Todorovic accountable for repeatedly
pressuring her boyfriend to kill Rengel.
Nordheimer said Todorovic has a character flaw that
is frightening and that a youth sentence would fail to adequately
protect the community.
Defence lawyer Marshall Sack had argued that a
youth sentence was appropriate since Todorovic hadn't actually done
the stabbing.
But Nordheimer rejected the argument saying "the
puppetmaster is not less blameworthy than the puppet."
The judge said the girl had all the advantages of
hardworking, loving parents, yet engaged in a murder he called
"malevolent and shocking."
Outside the court, Sack told reporters he would
advise the family to appeal the sentence.
Speaking on behalf of the Rengel family, Stefanie's
brother Ian called Todorovic a "disturbed individual" and said he
hoped she would benefit from the help now available to her.
"We still have more to go," said the 13-year-old in
reference to the September sentencing of D.B. "But at least some of it
has been done."
'Vile and obsessive jealousy'
Todorovic was 15 when she was driven, according to
Crown prosecutor Robin Flumerfelt, by "vile and obsessive jealousy,"
to use sexual blackmail via the internet to pressure D.B. into
murdering her perceived rival — a girl she had never met.
During the trial, Flumerfelt cited months of text
messages and MSN chat logs in which he alleged Todorovic used the
blackmail to spur her then 17-year-old boyfriend into killing Rengel.
Evidence included online exchanges and a frantic
pace of phone calls between Todorovic and D.B. that only abated after
Rengel's slaying.
M.T. apologizes for role in Rengel murder
CBC.ca
July 17, 2009
A 17-year-old stood in a Toronto courtroom on
Friday and said she is sorry and accepts "full responsibility" for her
part in the murder of a 14-year-old she suspected was her rival.
The teen, who was convicted earlier this year of
first-degree murder in the slaying of Stefanie Rengel, can only be
identified as M.T. because of her age.
Rengel was stabbed six times and left to die in a
snowbank on New Year's Day 2008 by a male teen who also cannot be
named and is only known outside the court by the initials D.B.
D.B. pleaded guilty to first-degree murder earlier
this year and is awaiting sentencing.
M.T.'s words on Friday marked the first time she
has spoken publicly about the murder.
"I want you to know that I take full responsibility
for my part. I know it's hard for you to believe me when I say that,"
she said.
"I feel very bad for the lives I've ruined and
affected. I know you may never forgive me for what I caused and I
understand that. But I wanted to share my apology with you. "
M.T. said she wishes she could go back and "change
everything" because "no one should have to lose someone they love in a
violent, horrific way."
The teenager added that she feels bad for the lives
she has ruined, but added she still believes she can still contribute
to society in a positive way.
Her lawyer, Marshall Sack, said his client wrote
her own statement.
"Her words weren't calculated for effect, they
weren't presented for effect. She said them for her benefit and for
the benefit of the Rengel family."
The Crown dismissed what it called an eleventh hour
apology, reminding the court that two psychiatrists said M.T.
continues to see herself as a victim and lacked empathy.
The Crown wants M.T. sentenced as an adult so she
will face automatic life imprisonment with no eligibility for parole
for five to seven years.
If she is sentenced under the terms of the Youth
Criminal Justice Act, she'll face a maximum of six years in custody
with a further four years under supervision.
M.T. was 15 when she was driven, according to Crown
attorney Robin Flumerfelt, by "vile and obsessive jealousy," to use
sexual blackmail via the internet to pressure D.B. into murdering her
perceived rival — a girl she had never even met.
During the trial, Flumerfelt cited months of text
messages and MSN chat logs in which he alleged M.T. used blackmail to
spur her then 17-year-old boyfriend into killing Rengel.
Evidence included online exchanges and the frantic
pace of phone calls between M.T. and D.B. that only abated after
Rengel's slaying.
M.T. will be sentenced by Justice Ian Nordheimer on
July 28.
Teens charged in girl's New Year's Day slaying
CBC.ca
January 2, 2008
Toronto police arrested two teenagers on Wednesday
in connection to the city's first homicide of 2008 after a 14-year-old
girl was stabbed to death Tuesday night.