Manitoba·UpdatedA Scottish jury has convicted a man of killing his Canadian girlfriend in the remote Shetland Islands of Scotland. Aren Pearson, 41, was found guilty Wednesday of assault and murder in the death of 24-year-old Claire Leveque, who had been living and working in Edmonton. Claire Leveque, 24, died of stab wounds to her neck and chestKaren Pauls · CBC News · Posted: Oct 15, 2025 8:56 AM EDT | Last Updated: 5 minutes agoAren Pearson, right, was convicted in the murder of his 24-year-old girlfriend Claire Leveque, left, of Edmonton. (Claire Leveque/Facebook) WARNING: This article contains details of intimate partner violence and may affect those who have experienced that themselves or know someone who has.A Scottish jury has convicted a man for killing his Canadian girlfriend in the remote Shetland Islands of Scotland, and a judge has ruled he must spend at least 25 years in prison.Aren Pearson, 41, was found guilty Wednesday of assault and murder in the death of 24-year-old Claire Leveque, who was originally from Westlock, Alta., but had been living and working in Edmonton.Five other charges, including attempting to defeat the ends of justice, were withdrawn.In the U.K., a murder conviction carries a mandatory life sentence. Judge Paul Arthurson ruled Pearson must serve a minimum of 25 years before he can apply for parole.Claire Leveque’s father, Clint Leveque, right, leaves Edinburgh’s High Court of Judiciary on Oct. 10. (BBC )The whole process has been devastating, said Hope Ingram, a cousin of Leveque’s who travelled from Edmonton to attend the trial and support her uncle.“Claire and I weren’t just cousins. We were sisters. We laughed together, we cried together, we got mad at each other, but we never stopped loving each other and being there for each other — until her killer took that away from us,” Ingram told CBC News before the verdict was announced.Graphic details revealed in courtThe couple met in Edmonton, and in 2023, they travelled to Sandness, a tiny community in the Shetland Islands, the latter of which has a regional population of roughly 23,000. The couple was living with Pearson’s mother at the time. Pearson is Canadian citizen but told court he had applied for his U.K. citizenship and had received his U.K. passport days after Leveque’s death.The home where Leveque was found dead in the Sandness area of the Shetland Islands in Scotland. (John Johnston/BBC News)Crown prosecutor Margaret Barron told court the case rested on admissions Pearson made on Feb. 11, 2024, during a 48-minute recording of a 999 emergency call from a house in Sandness.The main voice on the call was Pearson’s late mother, but court heard Pearson take the phone, identify himself and tell the operator that he had killed his girlfriend in a hot tub by stabbing her “more than 40 times,” including in the heart, stomach, face and neck, and that “I definitely killed her.”Father grieves after 24-year-old daughter from Alberta killed on Scotland’s Shetland IslandsCanadian woman’s violent death on remote Scottish island ‘like a bad dream’: friendPearson’s mother told police detectives she saw Leveque in the hot tub covered in blood, with severe injuries to her face.She said her son was behaving like a “zombie” and had stabbed himself in the neck, consumed brake fluid and drove his Porsche into the North Sea. Pearson’s Porsche is loaded on a trailer after being pulled from the North Sea not far from where Leveque was found dead of stab wounds. (John Johnston/BBC)One of the first police officers on the scene told court that Pearson said, “Murderers are to be killed … put a bullet in me.”A physician who treated Pearson testified he told her, “I’ve been trying to get rid of her for a while.” A psychiatrist found Pearson showed no evidence of a mood disorder or psychotic illness.Jurors also heard a six-minute audio recording of a conversation between the couple. In it, Leveque told Pearson that he hit her three times on her 24th birthday but that she still loved him, before adding, “You are going to kill me.”Pearson testified in his own defence, saying the couple had a fight when Leveque heard him talking to her father about her alcohol consumption. Aren Pearson’s defence counsel, Iain Paterson, told the jury the Crown had not proven its case without a reasonable doubt and urged them to acquit his client. (BBC)Under questioning by his lawyer, Iain Paterson, Pearson said Leveque was drinking whisky, lost her temper and struck him, then jumped into the hot tub and stabbed herself with a knife. He claimed he was so shocked he couldn’t remember what happened next, but he denied strangling her or holding her head under water.Court heard that during police questioning, Pearson was asked if he murdered Leveque. “To the best of my knowledge, no,” he replied.Paterson told jurors the Crown did not prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt and so they must acquit his client. “If he is lying, you might have expected him to come up with a better story,” he said in his closing speech.Sentencing decisionThe judge described the prosecution evidence as “substantial and compelling.” In contrast, he said Pearson’s evidence was a “malicious, vindictive, wholly fabricated account.”Arthurson said Leveque died a “squalid death” of multi-faceted violence and a “sustained episode of feral butchery.”Pearson has 14 days from the date of sentencing to lodge his intent to appeal the conviction, sentence or both. The Crown can also appeal the sentence if it feels it is unduly lenient.Leveque is being remembered by friends and family as a happy person who loved being with others. (Claire Leveque/Facebook)In a statement following the verdict, Scotland Police Det. Insp. Richard Baird described the murder as “truly horrifying.”“Our investigation uncovered evidence of a controlling and violent relationship with Claire Leveque, where Pearson sought to degrade and abuse her prior to her death,” he said.“These actions and his actions after his violent attack, which led to her death show him as a cruel and selfish individual and it is right that he will now face the consequences of what he has done.”While the verdict can’t change what happened, Baird said he hoped it will bring some closure to Leveque’s family. ‘We need to make sure that Claire is heard’One of the first journalists to arrive on the crime scene in 2023, Louise Glen told CBC News that neighbours told her that Pearson seemed to isolate his girlfriend, who was rarely seen in the small, tight-knit community. That Leveque was so “invisible” started to ring “alarm bells,” given that Pearson comes from a well-known family, said Glen, a crime and courts reporter for the Press and Journal newspaper.She notes that some of the testimony at trial, including the Crown’s cross-examination of Pearson’s and the video showing the bloodied hot tub and Leveque’s body, left some jurors in tears. A police officer stands at a roadblock near Sandness in February 2024. (BBC)“How can it possibly be that someone who is loved and cherished by her own family, who followed her dreams to come to one of the most beautiful places in the world, in Scotland, and yet meets her end with a man so callous that he films it and thinks that there is going to be no retribution for that?” she said Wednesday in an interview with CBC News. Glen said she hopes this case increases awareness around intimate partner violence and the resources available. She notes that there have been questions about whether Leveque had access to her passport or money of her own.“Here’s a woman who no longer has her voice,” she said. “We need to make sure that Claire is heard.”In a statement, Shetland Women’s Aid said cases like this can be triggering for others, urging anyone upset by the details or experiencing similar violence to reach out.“Everyone has the right to live free from violence, coercion and control,” the statement said. ”It devastates families, friends, and entire communities [and] reminds us why prevention, early education, and specialist support remain so vital.” Leveque’s remains were cremated and returned to her family. They will eventually be laid to rest beside her mother in Alberta. Her cousin hopes people will remember Leveque by her life rather than her death.If you’re in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, please call 911. If you’re affected by family or intimate partner violence, you can look for help through crisis lines and local support services. ABOUT THE AUTHORKaren Pauls covers Manitoba stories for CBC national news. She has worked across Canada, U.S. and Europe, and in CBC bureaus in Washington, London and Berlin. In 2025, Karen was the first recipient of CBC’s Audio Doc Unit fellowship program. Awards include the New York Festivals for coverage of the Greyhound bus beheading, and the Radio Television Digital News Association for stories about asylum seekers, the Michif language, the Humboldt Broncos bus tragedy, and the royal wedding. In 2007, Karen received the Canadian Association of Journalist’s Dateline Hong Kong Fellowship and did a radio documentary on the 10th anniversary of the deadly avian flu outbreak. Story tips at karen.pauls@cbc.ca. Follow Karen on InstagramFollow Karen on BlueskyFollow Karen on XFiles by Julia Wong/CBC, Steven Godden/BBC Scotland