British ColumbiaA lawyer from Kamloops, B.C., accused of first-degree murder in the death of his client admits to killing the man, but says it should be manslaughter.Submissions before trial’s closing arguments show Rogelio Bagabuyo admitting to killing Mohd Abdullah in 2022Brieanna Charlebois · The Canadian Press · Posted: Oct 06, 2025 4:47 PM EDT | Last Updated: 2 hours agoAn RCMP van outside the legal practice of Rogelio (Butch) Bagabuyo in Kamloops, B.C., pictured on March 22, 2022. (Doug Herbert/CBC)A lawyer from Kamloops, B.C., accused of first-degree murder in the death of his client admits to killing the man, but says it should be manslaughter.As closing arguments were about to start at the trial of Rogelio (Butch) Bagabuyo, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Kathleen Ker confirmed with the accused’s lawyer that his written submissions include that his client concedes to killing Mohd Abdullah, but that he should be convicted of the lesser charge.”That is correct,” Mark Swartz told the judge.However, Crown lawyer Ann Katrine Saettler told the judge-alone trial that Abdullah, a lecturer at Thompson Rivers University, hired Bagabuyo in 2016 and the two men conspired to hide “large sums of money” during Abdullah’s separation from his wife.”The evidence has shown that Mr. Bagabuyo squandered the money on his own living expenses and would have been unable to return the funds,” she said.Abdullah’s wife died in September 2019 before they could divorce, but Bagabuyo convinced him “it was necessary to leave the funds in his care for two more years” to protect the money from his wife’s estate or family, Saettler told the judge. Bagabuyo was charged with interfering with human remains on March 21, 2022. (Submitted by Kamloops Collaborative Family Law Association)But Saettler said Abdullah eventually grew impatient about getting his money back.”It is the Crown’s theory that by March 1, 2022, Mr. Bagabuyo knew he would not be able to continue to fool Mr. Abdullah much longer,” she said. “He had decided the only way to escape the consequences of having defrauded Mr. Abdullah — consequences that he surely understood would very likely include disbarment, disgrace, prosecution and prison — was to kill Mr. Abdullah and dispose of the body.”She said Bagabuyo was the executor of Abdullah’s will and the power of attorney over his financial matters.”If no one knew Mr. Abdullah was dead, Mr. Bagabuyo was in a position to live off of Mr. Abdullah’s remaining substantial finances,” Saettler told the court.Saettler said the Crown’s theory is that Bagabuyo stabbed Abdullah to death on March 11, 2022, when he arrived for a meeting at the lawyer’s office, which was under restoration after a fire.”He fashioned a homemade garrote and brought it with him to the office as a device to ensure Mr. Abdullah was dead after he was disabled by the stabbing.”The Crown’s theory is that Mr. Bagabuyo planned to remove the body by concealing it in a large plastic bin which he purchased on March 1,” Saettler said, adding that he also obtained a second, identical bin as a “decoy” that he filled with legal papers.After the murder, the Crown prosecutor said Bagabuyo wrapped Abdullah’s body in plastic sheeting, put the garrote around his neck, placed him in the bin and secured it with ratchet straps. He then hauled the bin into his car. RCMP released these images of Mohd Abdullah taken in March 2022, shortly before his death. (Submitted by the RCMP)Saettler said it is believed he initially brought the tote into his backyard. But, she said, his plans for disposal changed when he was contacted by police about Abdullah being missing. That, she said, “accelerated his plan to dispose of the body” and sought the help of an unsuspecting neighbour, who he convinced to rent a van and help him dispose of the tote where he put the body.Bagabuyo, who has been out on bail during the trial, was arrested on March 18, 2022, the day after the body was discovered inside the tote by the neighbour’s grandson.A conviction for first-degree murder results in a sentence of life in prison without chance of parole for 25 years, while there is no mandatory sentence for manslaughter unless a firearm is used. With files from CBC News
B.C. lawyer facing 1st-degree murder charge admits to killing client but claims it was manslaughter
