Andrea Giesbrecht, accused of hiding bodies of infants, gets bail - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:59 PM | Calgary | -5.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Andrea Giesbrecht, accused of hiding bodies of infants, gets bail

The Winnipeg woman accused of concealing the remains of six infants who were found in a storage locker last fall has been granted bail.

Winnipeg woman faces long list of bail conditions, including staying at supervised facility

Andrea Giesbrecht, accused of hiding bodies of infants, gets bail

9 years ago
Duration 1:11
The Winnipeg woman accused of concealing the remains of six infants found in a storage locker last fall has been granted bail.

The Winnipeg woman accused of concealing the remains of six infants found in a storage locker last fall has beengranted bail.

The infants' remains were found in a U-Haul storage locker in October. (CBC)
AndreaGiesbrecht, 40, has been in custody since shortly after the remains of six infants were found in a McPhillips Street U-Haul storage locker inOctober. U-Haul employees made the discovery when they wentto clean outthe locker because rental payments had not been made.

Giesbrecht faces a long list of bail conditions, among them that she stay at a supervised facility. Where she will be staying is not being made public.

If she becomes pregnant, she must notify her bail supervisor.

Giesbrecht is banned from being at any location where gambling takes place and must enrol in a number of programs, including Gamblers Anonymous and anger management.

She pleaded guilty in 2013 to fraud and blamed her gambling addiction for borrowingnearly $8,000 froma 73-year-old woman and writing bad cheques to cover it.

Giesbrecht, who has been held in custody since her arrest last year, has had previousbail requests delayed several times in recent months.

Officially, she faces six charges of concealing a body.

Her trial datehas been set for April 18-22, 2016.

Police initially believed there were three or four bodies in various states of decomposition, but later increased that to six.

Giesbrecht'slawyer, GregBrodsky, has said a forensic pathologistand a forensic anthropologist brought in by the Crown found no evidence of foul play. There is still nothing to indicate the infants were not stillborn, and the identity of any parents has not been determined, he said.