September 19th, 2024

Escaped inmate sentenced to life for the ‘cold-blooded’ murder of a B.C. man

By The Canadian Press on December 15, 2022.

William Head Institution is shown through a security fence in Victoria, B.C., on Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2008. A sentencing hearing is scheduled to start today in B.C. Supreme Court for James Lee Busch, one of the two inmates who escaped from a minimum-security prison and killed a man.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Lam

VANCOUVER – Friends and relatives of murder victim Martin Payne say they are haunted by the actions of “two selfish, reckless” people who chose their victim because his home was near the prison where the men escaped.

A B.C. Supreme Court jury found James Lee Busch guilty of first-degree murder late Wednesday.

At his sentencing hearing today, Justice David Crossin called the killing cold-blooded and unspeakable, and sentenced Busch to life, without chance of parole for 25 years.

Payne, who was 60, was murdered on July 8, 2019, a day after Busch and Zachary Armitage walked away from the minimum-security William Head prison, located eight kilometres from the victim’s home in Metchosin, west of Victoria.

His daughter, Calla Payne, told the sentencing hearing that her dad was a constant source of love and support, and the decisions made by the two selfish, reckless men took that away from her.

Both men pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder as the trial began on Nov. 14, but Armitage entered a guilty plea two weeks later without the jury present, and the trial continued for Busch.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 15, 2022.

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