A courtroom at the Edmonton Law Courts building in Edmonton on Friday, June 28, 2019. An Alberta judge has convicted a man of manslaughter in the killing of a woman who was stabbed in the head with a steak knife. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson
A courtroom at the Edmonton Law Courts building in Edmonton on Friday, June 28, 2019. An Alberta judge has convicted a man of manslaughter in the killing of a woman who was stabbed in the head with a steak knife. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson
EDMONTON - An Edmonton man has failed to overturn a murder conviction he received two years ago for stabbing a girl to death with scissors.
David Moss had urged the Alberta Court of Appeal to reduce his conviction from murder to the less-severe manslaughter in the death of the seven-year-old.
Moss argued the trial judge should not have convicted him of murder — which carries a life sentence — because he was mentally unwell and not in a state of mind to form the intent to commit such a crime.
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But appeal judges say when all of the evidence is taken into account, there is not enough to show the judge was wrong to draw a conclusion that Moss knew his actions could cause harm.
Court heard Moss was a friend of the girl’s mother and one night, just as the mother was about to kiss the girl good night, he entered her bedroom with a pair of scissors, pushed the mom aside, and slashed and cut the girl’s neck repeatedly.
Moss testified that he thought he was in a game as he stabbed the girl and said the voice of a demon told him to harm her.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 4, 2025.
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