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B.C. babysitter must be acquitted in toddler’s drowning death, Supreme Court rules

B.C. babysitter must be acquitted in toddler’s drowning death, Supreme Court rules


The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that a woman originally convicted in the 2011 drowning death of a toddler in her care must be acquitted.

Tammy Marion Bouvette was babysitting 19-month-old Iyanna Teeple in Cranbrook, B.C., in 2011 when the toddler was found unresponsive in the bath. Teeple was flown to a hospital in Calgary, where she later died. 

Bouvette was originally charged with second-degree murder in the child’s death, then later pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of criminal negligence. She was sentenced to 12 months in jail.

But an independent review of the case determined that the Crown hadn’t disclosed all evidence to Bouvette or her counsel before she entered her guilty plea.

In 2023, the B.C. Court of Appeal quashed her conviction and ordered a stay of proceedings, but declined to enter an acquittal. 

Bouvette appealed and, in a ruling released Friday morning, the Supreme Court of Canada concluded she should be immediately acquitted on the grounds that the Crown also sought an acquittal and said it would call no evidence at a new trial. 

‘A miscarriage of justice’

The case became the subject of an investigation by CBC’s The Fifth Estate in 2020 after CBC journalists uncovered a report that criticized pivotal pathology evidence in the Crown’s case against Bouvette.

Bouvette has maintained she did not abuse or kill the child and told The Fifth Estate she had wanted to avoid a lengthier prison sentence for a murder charge when she made her plea.

A side view of a person's face.
Bouvette is seen in The Fifth Estate’s documentary. On Friday, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that she should be acquitted of her criminal negligence charge in the death of 19-month-old Iyanna Teeple. (Doug Husby/CBC)

In 2023, the B.C. Court of Appeal determined that the B.C. Prosecution Service had failed to disclose to Bouvette’s defence lawyers several items of key evidence, including the pathology evidence report, which supported Bouvette’s claim that she had not hurt or neglected the child.

Bouvette’s former defence lawyer told The Fifth Estate that he had not received that report from the Crown during the prosecution. 

At the time, the judges wrote that they “make no finding of bad faith or malice on the part of the Crown. But neither can we ignore that the disclosure breaches were not isolated or confined to information of dubious value to the appellant.”

“As a consequence of material non-disclosure, the appellant was deprived of the opportunity to make an informed decision about how to plead apprised of the strengths and weaknesses of the case against her on fundamental issues.”

The court ruled that Bouvette’s criminal negligence conviction causing the toddler’s death was “the product of a miscarriage of justice,” and ordered a stay of proceedings because retrying her case would be an “abuse of process.”

Friday ruling

In the Friday ruling, judges were unanimous in their decision, if for different reasons. 

Writing for the majority, Justice Nicholas Kasirer said the first possible ground for an acquittal under section 686(2) of the Criminal Code is where there’s a lack of evidence to ground a reasonable conviction.

The second possible ground is where the Crown seeks an acquittal and says it would call no evidence at a new trial. 

Kasirer said Bouvette was acquitted on this second ground. 

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