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Video of ѻýshocking, chilling executionѻý opens B.C. murder hearing

Sentencing underway for Brandon Woody after pleading guilty to second-degree murder in Nanaimo
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Wanda Campbell, mother of Andrew McLean, who was shot to death in the Howard Johnson Harbourside Hotel lobby in 2017, holds a photo of McLean when he was a child. Campbell submitted a victimѻýs statement and watched video evidence of her sonѻýs killing during the opening day of sentencing proceedings for Brandon Tyler Woody, who pleaded guilty to second-degree murder Feb. 15. CHRIS BUSH/The News Bulletin

A video monitor shows a man, wearing a black balaclava, walk up behind another man, raise a handgun and fire twice into his victimѻýs back. The victim falls to the floor and tries to cover his head as his assailant steps up, holds the gun close to the victimѻýs head, and fires two more rounds before he runs from the hotel lobby.

The video, only a few seconds long, was captured by a security camera in the Howard Johnson Harbourside Hotel lobby in Nanaimo on April 2017, .

Woody, arrested hours later in Duncan, was charged with first-degree murder in the shooting, witnessed by the hotelѻýs night clerk, but of second-degree murder Feb. 15.

The video footage was Exhibit No. 1 in the Crownѻýs argument against leniency on the first day of Woodyѻýs sentencing proceedings in B.C. Supreme Court on Monday.

ѻýThe attack on the victim, as depicted on the surveillance video, is a brutal, shocking and chilling account of an execution killing carried out with remarkable precision,ѻý said prosecutor Frank Dubenski. ѻýThe victim was unarmed, unsuspecting and in a vulnerable and helpless position. ѻý

ѻýOnce the victim was on the ground, Woody showed no mercy. Even the presence of an innocent eyewitness gave Woody no pause in carrying out this mission.ѻý

Dubenski told the court both men were involved with the drug trade in Nanaimo and Victoria, and the 34-year-old McLean was known for violence.

He recounted how, hours before the killing at the hotel, Woody entered a home on the 700 block of Haliburton Street wearing a balaclava and threatened several residents at gunpoint to coerce them into telling him McLeanѻýs whereabouts.

According to Crown, Woody initially claimed in his defense that he did not personally know the victim, had only given a partial description of him, and didnѻýt know why someone wanted him dead other than he ѻýgoofed up.ѻý

He claimed he was approached and offered a ѻýridiculousѻý amount of money to carry out the killing, which he turned down, Crown said, and if he said no again, the people who ordered the hit would go after his wife.

Woody also allegedly was contacted by phone by one unknown individual throughout the night leading up to the killing. The person gave him basic instructions, including which door of the hotel would be unlocked and that they wanted four shots and ѻýwas told at least two top, meaning in the head,ѻý Dubenski said.

As for the handgun, Woody allegedly said heѻýd been given it for the shooting, and then after, gave it to a motorcyclist who was waiting near the Duke Point Highway turnoff and allegedly wearing Hell Angels colours.

Dubenski also noted an RCMP officer had stopped Woody on Terminal Avenue moments after the shooting, but let him go when the emergency call went out about the gunfire. It was not until shortly afterward that Woody was considered a likely suspect.

Paul McMurray, Woodyѻýs defence counsel, did not dispute Dubenskiѻýs presentation of facts.

Wanda Campbell, McLeanѻýs mother, who had travelled from Alberta for the sentencing, saw the video of her sonѻýs killing for the first time Sunday.

ѻýEach day feels like Iѻým just going through the motions, walking in a haze,ѻý Campbell wrote in her victim statement. ѻýMostly I feel empty and so much as Andrew is on my mind every minute of every day. I will never be able to forgive the person responsible for this brutal senseless crime.ѻý

Sentencing proceedings are expected to continue until Wednesday.

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Chris Bush

About the Author: Chris Bush

As a photographer/reporter with the Nanaimo News Bulletin since 1998.
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