Man found guilty in machete slaying of acquaintance he met days earlier

Jurors believe one-time co-accused; ‘I can never make sense of what you did,’ victim’s stepdaughter says

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A jury has convicted a Winnipeg man of first-degree murder in a case that hinged on the evidence of a one-time co-accused granted immunity from prosecution in return for her testimony.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 19/02/2025 (224 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

A jury has convicted a Winnipeg man of first-degree murder in a case that hinged on the evidence of a one-time co-accused granted immunity from prosecution in return for her testimony.

Aaron Mousseau Abigosis showed no reaction as jurors found him guilty early Wednesday afternoon in the August 2020 killing of 56-year-old Bud Paul, a man he had met just days earlier.

The mandatory sentence for first-degree murder is life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

SUPPLIEDThe Crown alleged Aaron Mousseau Abigosis killed Paul, 56, on Aug. 3, 2020. Abigosis has been found guilty of first-degree murder.

SUPPLIED

The Crown alleged Aaron Mousseau Abigosis killed Paul, 56, on Aug. 3, 2020. Abigosis has been found guilty of first-degree murder.

Abigosis, 43, will be formally sentenced at a later date following the completion of a court-ordered Gladue report that will delve into his Indigenous background.

Paul’s naked, decomposed remains were discovered Aug. 11, 2020, in a stand of willows, off a dead-end road on the northern edge of Roseau River First Nation, the home reserve of Abigosis’s one-time co-accused, Janine Atkinson.

Prosecutors alleged Abigosis killed Paul on Aug. 3. Paul was beaten and slashed in the abdomen with what prosecutors described as a brush axe.

Paul’s burned-out vehicle was found on Queen Street, near Polo Park mall, on Aug. 10.

Paul was a man of “honour and deep conviction,” who had proudly maintained his sobriety for 20 years before meeting Abigosis and Atkinson, said Paul’s stepdaughter Sabrina Clarke.

“He was a source of strength and wisdom, even when I didn’t think I needed it,” Clarke said, struggling through tears as she read from a victim impact statement.

Clarke looked at Abigosis repeatedly as she read her statement. Abigosis looked straight ahead toward the jury box, never appearing to make eye contact with Clarke.

Paul’s murder robbed her of a “lifetime of memories and shared joys,” Clarke said.

“And for what?” she said. “I can never make sense of what you did … like he had a life of no value.”

Atkinson testified she met Paul over Facebook in mid-July 2020 and then in person for the first time roughly two weeks later.

“He was looking for companionship,” she told jurors. “We would just drive around, hang out.”

On July 31, Atkinson and Abigosis, whom she had met earlier that summer, spent the night with Paul, watching movies at his Hespeler Avenue apartment.

The next morning, Paul agreed to drive Abigosis and Atkinson to Pine Creek First Nation, where Abigosis wanted to pick up a cheque from his mother, Atkinson told court.

Atkinson said they stopped at Long Plain First Nation, near Portage la Prairie, where Abigosis visited a few houses “to get high.”

By 4:45 p.m., the trio was in Neepawa, where security cameras captured Atkinson purchasing a bottle of vodka at a liquor store. Security video showed Abigosis behind the wheel and Paul in the backseat when they drove out of the parking lot.

Atkinson said she had been using cocaine during the road trip and described herself at times being “really intoxicated.”

Abigosis drove to Dauphin where he “went to a couple of places” and visited his sister before driving on to Pine Creek, Atkinson said. There, Abigosis went to his mother’s house and picked up his cheque, while Paul waited in the car.

The trio left Pine Creek, Atkinson testified, and headed toward Dauphin on a dirt road when Abigosis stopped the car and pulled Paul out of the backseat.

SUPPLIED
                                Aaron Mousseau Abigosis seen outside a Neepawa liquor store on Aug. 1, 2020, days before prosecutors said he killed Bud Paul. Abigosis has been found guilty of first-degree murder.

SUPPLIED

Aaron Mousseau Abigosis seen outside a Neepawa liquor store on Aug. 1, 2020, days before prosecutors said he killed Bud Paul. Abigosis has been found guilty of first-degree murder.

Abigosis “started fighting (Paul)… he f—-ing football-kicked him in the balls” and punched him in the face, she said.

Atkinson said she heard Abigosis tell Paul “something about being a john and picking up chicks.”

At Abigosis’s direction, Atkinson took the wheel and the group continued to Dauphin, where they spent two nights at the home of Abigosis’s sister, before driving back to Winnipeg.

As they drove past Health Sciences Centre, Atkinson said she urged Abigosis to stop and drop Paul off. Abigosis refused.

“(Police) cruisers were sitting in emergency,” she said. “He didn’t want to stop there: two native people showing up with a badly injured white man.”

They made a few more stops, Atkinson testified, before Abigosis said to her: “Since you went to my rez, let’s go to your rez.”

The group continued to Roseau River when they pulled over and Abigosis forced Paul to snort fentanyl, Atkinson said.

Jurors heard an autopsy found evidence of cocaine in Paul’s system, but no fentanyl.

Atkinson told Abigosis what back roads to take to avoid security on the reserve, which at the time was under pandemic lockdown conditions. They drove down a dead-end road and pulled over. When Abigosis asked her where they should take Paul, she pointed to the bush.

It was Abigosis’s intention to “take (Paul) there to murder him,” Atkinson said. “I know what he was trying to do.”

She said Paul was unconscious as Abigosis bound him with rope and took him to the bush. She said Abigosis was carrying a machete when he returned to the car.

Abigosis changed his clothes, Atkinson testified, got back behind the wheel and drove back to Winnipeg.

Jurors heard Atkinson used Paul’s bank card after he was dead to withdraw more than $1,000 from his account.

In a closing address to jurors last week, defence lawyer Tara Walker argued it was Atkinson who killed Paul and that she seized on an opportunity to sign an immunity agreement with prosecutors and escape a life sentence.

dean.pritchard@freepress.mb.ca

Dean Pritchard

Dean Pritchard
Courts reporter

Dean Pritchard is courts reporter for the Free Press. He has covered the justice system since 1999, working for the Brandon Sun and Winnipeg Sun before joining the Free Press in 2019. Read more about Dean.

Every piece of reporting Dean produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

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History

Updated on Wednesday, February 19, 2025 5:01 PM CST: Adds quotes, details. Changed headline, adds deck.

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