Canadian True Crime - 133 The Lake Family Murders—Part 2
Episode Date: April 2, 2023[Part 2 of 2] Sensational trials are held for three members of the Bannister family to get to the truth of what happened to the Lake family that night—and why a baby was at the centre of it all.Warn...ing: this series includes the death of a young child. Please take care when listening.Old Dorchester County Jail, New Brunswick:https://dorchesterjail.com/Canadian True Crime donates monthly to help those facing injustice.This month we have donated to the Canadian Resource Centre for Victims of Crime.Listen ad-free and early:CTC premium feeds are available on Amazon Music - included with Prime, Apple Podcasts, Patreon and Supercast. Credits:Research and writing: Eileen MacfarlaneAdditional research and writing, sound design: Kristi LeeAudio editing and production, theme songs: We Talk of DreamsProduction assistance: Jesse Hawke Script consulting: Carol WeinbergDisclaimer voiced by Erik KrosbyFor the full list of resources, information sources, and credits:See the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This is part two of a two-part series, an additional content warning. This series includes
the death of a young child. Please take care when listening.
Where we left off, Philip Lake and his common law wife Bertha Ring had been murdered at their
New Brunswick home in the morning hours of January 6th, 1936. Their toddler Jackie was left to die
of exposure outside and their tiny shack was set on fire. Their four-month-old baby,
Betty, wasn't found and it was assumed that her remains were consumed by the flames.
Earlier that evening, several locals had seen 19-year-old Arthur Bannister walking in the area
with his.22 caliber rifle. When the RCMP went to the Bannister home with a mitten found along
the trail, his 20-year-old brother, Daniel Bannister, identified it as belonging to him
but said he'd loaned it to Arthur. And then investigators discovered a baby at the Bannister
home that at first, their 40-year-old mother Mae Bannister insisted was hers. But she soon
changed her story and said her 15-year-old daughter Francis brought the baby home after
rescuing it from a house fire. It seemed likely that this baby and little Betty Lake were one
and the same, but there were so many unanswered questions. The grand jury determined that brothers
Arthur Bannister and Daniel Bannister would go to trial on murder and kidnapping charges,
where they would face a mandatory death sentence if found guilty. Because the stories they'd given
to investigators had been so different, they would need separate trials. Their mother Mae would
also go on trial on charges amounting to procuring, counseling and harboring a kidnapped child.
All three trials would be held in March of 1936, three months after the Lake Family murders,
and they would be the first ever kidnapping trials in the province of New Brunswick.
19-year-old Arthur Bannister's trial was first and he was seen in the prisoner's dock dressed in
brown trousers, a blue shirt that was undone at the neck and a heavy blue coat. He spoke clearly
when the indictment was read to him, entering a plea of not guilty to the charges. 20-year-old
Daniel also pleaded not guilty at his trial and was seen wearing dark trousers, a blue shirt,
a tie and a heavy blue sweater. Neither of the brothers could read or write and there was speculation
that they both may have had additional intellectual challenges. Daniel Bannister also dealt with
physical health issues that caused delays in the proceedings. He was frequently unwell
and was said to have had epilepsy. Newspapers would describe him suffering from weak spells
and there were concerns that he may not have been competent to stand trial.
The judge brought in a doctor who determined that Daniel was, quote,
crafty and knew what's what. The crowned star witness was 15-year-old Francis Bannister,
who testified at both of her brother's trials. The RCMP had detained her for more than three months
as a material witness, only being released from jail when she was required to testify
and by the time she was called to testify she was described as a clearly reluctant witness.
Francis was composed but also openly defiant, even when the judge threatened her with jail time
for being in contempt of court. She didn't deny that the details she'd given so far
had been contradictory, but she wouldn't give a straight answer as to why. Remember,
she first insisted that the baby found at the Bannister home belonged to her mother,
but then after May changed her own story, Francis did too, insisting that her older
brother Daniel had asked her to keep him company on the way to the lakeshack so they could bring
their other brother Arthur home. And as she waited at the door, she said Arthur suddenly
opened it and handed her a baby, which she carried back home. In the witness box,
Francis Bannister confirmed that on January the 2nd, three nights before the murders,
she and her brother Daniel did the 20-mile trek over to the lake family's home,
because she knew her other brother Arthur was staying there in an outhouse to prepare for
going trapping. Remember, there was a local trapper named Earl O'Brien who was also at that
outhouse with Arthur and gave his account of hearing voices outside and seeing a young man
and teenage girl wearing men's trousers standing there for unknown reasons. Earl watched Arthur
grab his rifle and go out to speak with them, and then he came in and they went home.
Earl had no idea what it was all about, and Francis apparently didn't either. She started off by
saying she had no idea why she and Daniel had to go there and meet Arthur, but later on in
cross-examination, she did admit that she knew the purpose of their trip was to get baby Betty.
The Crown would tell the court that this was actually the first attempt at the murder and
kidnap plot, but it failed because the siblings didn't expect Earl O'Brien to be at the outhouse
with Arthur. Francis continued telling the jury that three days after that, on the evening of
January 5th, she and Daniel returned to the lake family shack for the same reason, to pick up
their brother Arthur. They left their home at around 8pm, trudging through the snow-covered
woods and arrived at the lake's shack just before midnight. She said Arthur came outside to meet
them and then returned inside while she and Daniel waited. Francis told the jury that Daniel did not
go into the lake's shack the night of the murders. She said she heard what sounded like a gunshot
and then Arthur emerged from the shack holding a baby wrapped in a blanket. She wouldn't say what
he said to her when he handed her the bundle. As she and Daniel turned back and started walking
home with the baby, she heard a woman scream and looked back, seeing something glowing red between
the trees around the place where the shack stood. Francis testified that after about 20 minutes of
walking, Arthur caught up with them and as they continued walking home together, she watched him
break his 22-caliber rifle in half and throw the pieces into the bushes, where investigators later
found it. The court heard that when the trio arrived home with the baby, their mother may was
pleased. Francis had admitted under cross-examination that they were there to get the baby, but she
wasn't forthcoming with any answers as to why. And it didn't go unnoticed that her testimony
didn't include any details that implicated her mother, other than saying she was pleased when
they returned home. Defence Council Lambert would tell the jury that Francis had been under the
influence of the RCMP from the night she'd been taken into custody. Quote,
All the time Francis gave evidence, there were five or six RCMP constables in their scarlet tunics
down there to the left of the prisoner. They did not sit there while any other witnesses gave
evidence. I submit that she was under the influence of the police even while she was giving evidence
and during the time she was on the witness stand, they sat down there with their eyes on the little
girl. Also entered into evidence were the crime scene photos and maps indicating where the bodies
were found and those two gold teeth belonging to Philip Lake. At the second autopsy, a 22-caliber
bullet was found in Philip's skull and a ballistics expert testified that he had reassembled Arthur's
broken 22-caliber rifle and fired bullets from it and then compared those bullets to the one
retrieved from Philip Lake's skull. He determined that the marks found on the bullets were a match.
Neither Arthur Bannister nor Daniel Bannister testified in their own defence. Arthur was seen
smiling every so often from the prisoner's dock, clearly undisturbed by the reasons he was there.
In closing arguments, the Crown presented its theory about what the evidence showed likely
happened that evening. Francis had testified that Arthur left in the afternoon and she and
Daniel left hours later, meeting him outside the Lake family shack at about midnight.
After one or both men entered the home, Francis reported hearing a gunshot and then Arthur
appeared at the door with a baby which he handed to her. The Crown told the court that the gunshot
she heard was when a bullet was fired from Arthur's 22-caliber rifle into Philip Lake's skull.
Defence Council Lambert argued that there was no proof of who actually fired the gun,
but the Crown said it didn't matter who used what weapon. Francis had not only placed both
her brothers at the scene but she also positively identified one of two knives found in the rubble
as belonging to her brother Daniel. She said it was a knife that he always carried under his
belt but was now missing. There was no proof that anyone else was around that evening and it
all amounted to evidence that both men had gone to the Lake family shack armed and with intent
to kidnap the baby. Crown prosecutor PJ Hughes said, quote,
there is no doubt Philip Lake was shot and that four-month-old Betty Lake was taken from
her mother's side, perhaps as she slept. Francis had testified that after she was
handed the baby and started running, she heard a woman screaming. Philip Lake's common-law wife
Bertha was likely asleep when the banisters showed up and even though she was almost naked,
she didn't hesitate to grab her toddler Jackie and run for her life. The two sets of footprints
in the snow leading away from the house to the spot where her body was found was evidence that
someone had been running after her to the spot where her body was located about a quarter of a
mile away from the shack. There were blood drops in the snow, evidence that she was likely
bludgeoned with an object as she tried to keep running. Seriously injured and growing weaker
from her head wound, Bertha dropped little Jackie and collapsed just 40 feet away.
She likely spent her last few minutes alive, thrashing and writhing in desperation to save
her toddler and her agony was physically etched into the snow at her final resting place.
Whoever it was that chased her ran back to the shack, leaving her bleeding out and little Jackie
floundering in the snow where he would soon freeze to death. The crown said, nobody said
anything, nobody turned back. Footprints in the snow showed police pretty well what happened,
at least in the bush. The evidence showed that after the Lake family home was set alight,
the two brothers started the trek back home. Once they caught up with their sister,
Arthur broke his rifle and threw the splintered pieces into the snow,
likely thinking he was destroying evidence. When it came to Daniel Bannister's involvement,
the crown said that the evidence showed he was present and therefore just as guilty as his brother.
Defense counsel Lambert tried many tactics in both Arthur and Daniel's trials. He tried
to cast doubt that the charred remains belonged to Philip Lake, despite the dental records.
He insinuated that the relationship between Philip Lake and Bertha Ring was tumultuous,
and that a fight may have broken out between them that led to a murder suicide.
He tried another tactic, quote, the crown has not yet provided a motive, but in Moncton there is a
man who had a motive, he is Marshal Ring, former husband of the woman living with this man Lake.
It had been at least two years since Bertha left him for Philip Lake, but the defense tried to
present him as an alternate suspect who returned to get his revenge. Lambert described the Bannister
young men as being poor, in rags separated from their mother, as the RCMP used every tactic in
the book to drag them down. He described the case against Daniel Bannister as being purely
circumstantial, with no evidence that placed him inside the house. But the judge pushed back on
this, telling the jury, quote, if a gang plans a murder, each and every one of them is guilty
regardless of which one planned the act. Should you come to the conclusion that Daniel Bannister
went to Philip Lake's house to steal the Lake baby, and someone did an act which caused it,
then that is murder. Both Daniel Bannister and Arthur Bannister were found guilty of murder,
a crime that carried a mandatory death sentence. Their mother, Mae Bannister, was apparently
beside herself when she learned about this verdict, but Arthur seemed unfazed. He was seen smiling
and rubbing his nose with his sleeve before being led back to his jail cell. When it came to Daniel's
guilty verdict, the jury recommended clemency. It may have been because of his intellectual and
health challenges, or maybe because there was reasonable doubt about his level of participation
in the murders. But the judge didn't agree, and sentenced both men to death by hanging.
Defence lawyer Lambert announced his intention to appeal the conviction, on the basis that
Francis was a reluctant witness who had been compelled to testify against her brothers
when she didn't really want to. But the judge had actually referenced this in his charge to the
jury, so there were no grounds for appeal. He had said, quote, of course she was reluctant,
she was brought here to testify against her brother, but she told of what happened,
and the only thing you must consider is sworn evidence given by living persons in this court.
There was one giant unanswered question left. In the closing arguments of Arthur Bannister's
trial, Defence counsel Lambert referenced the Crown's assertion that the crime was a murder
kidnap plot. He asked the jury to consider why 19-year-old Arthur Bannister would want a baby.
Quote, look at him, what would he do with a baby? There are plenty in Moncton that maybe
had without committing murder. A baby would only be an added expense to an already poverty-stricken
family. A young, good-looking girl like Francis could, without any trouble, have got a baby in
Moncton, yet the Crown claimed she had gone to Lake's home to get one. It was the last remaining
question. Why were the Bannisters so intent on kidnapping a baby? What purpose was a baby going
to serve in their lives, and why did the Lake family have to be murdered to get that baby?
The answers would come as part of Mae Bannister's trial.
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The Trial of May Bannister opened with a bizarre reveal. A life-size baby doll was brought into
the court, and the jury heard that this doll had been found during the search of the Bannister
home. It was admitted into evidence. As the doll was passed to Justice Barry, he jokingly asked
the crown if it was alive. The prosecutor replied, that seems to have been one of the defects, my
lord. The crown told jurors that towards the end of 1935, May Bannister had been trying to pass the
doll off as a newborn by carrying it around Monkton, wrapped tightly in a blanket to conceal the
jupe. He told the jury that the device that makes the doll squeak had been removed, likely because
it was a giveaway that it was a doll and not a baby. Again, baby Betty Lake was brought into the
courtroom to be identified by Otto Blackney. She had since been put up for adoption, and there was
a considerable amount of interest according to newspapers. The crown's case was that the whole
murder kidnapping plot had been the brainchild of May Bannister, who had the ultimate goal of
using a baby to extort money from two men. One of those men was Milton Trites, who met the Bannister
family through the Salvation Army. He testified about hiring May Bannister as his housekeeper,
stating that she would sometimes stay overnight at his house. It wasn't overtly said, but it appeared
that Milton Trites and May Bannister were having a relationship of some sort, and he generously
gave the family money, food and groceries. The crown's case was that May Bannister needed more,
more assistance, more money, more food, and she was looking at ways to guilt Milton into being
even more generous. And that's where a baby came in. Milton Trites told the jury about the fall
of 1935, when May suddenly told him she had to quit working as his housekeeper for a while because
she was leaving to give birth to his baby. The crown asked him if he was under the impression
that he had actually fathered the baby, and he said not wholly, but he was partially convinced.
Whether or not Milton Trites 100% believed he was the father of the baby May said she was
pregnant with. He took his responsibility seriously, immediately arranging for a crib and other
supplies for the family in anticipation of their upcoming arrival. He told the jury that May Bannister
returned sometime in December, saying she'd had a baby girl in Moncton, but had to leave
her there for a little while. She said that some of her acquaintances there had seen her holding
the baby. On January the 6th, the same day the Lake Family Murders were discovered,
May Bannister asked Milton to come over to her house so he could meet the baby for the first time.
Milton raced over, and when he saw the infant he asked May if they could name her Thyra Milton
Trites. He said May agreed. As the police were investigating the Lake Family Murders,
Milton was buying groceries for the whole Bannister family, as well as medicine,
clothes and other items for their new baby. It appeared that Milton was very fond of May Bannister
and her family. When the arrests started happening, he took care of the unidentified baby girl,
as well as 13-year-old Marie Bannister until her father returned. And there was speculation that
Milton Trites may have been the mystery man who retained and paid for Defence Council Murray
Lambert to represent the Bannister family members in all legal proceedings. As you'll remember,
it was also stated that he was likely to be a crown witness and not related to the Bannister family.
But Milton Trites was not the only man May Bannister was targeting for extortion.
The court heard testimony from another man, Albert Powell,
the busy railway freight checker, part-time Sunday School teacher and generous Salvation
Army volunteer. Albert testified about that strange day that May suddenly accused him of
getting 13-year-old Marie pregnant. Quote, She told me Marie was going to have a baby
and that I was going to be responsible for its upkeep, but I stood my ground because I was an
innocent man. He told the jury that May threatened to shoot him, but she had a change of heart after
he reprimanded her and reminded her how much he had done for the family. May apologised for speaking
to him too severely and begged him to come visit their home again. On the stand, Albert Powell
was asked about his personal generosity towards the Bannister family, and he testified that he
had given them over $200 the previous year, a considerable amount of money for the time.
He said he had also fulfilled many handwritten grocery lists the Bannisters had given him.
He told the jury that May Bannister knew he owned property in Moncton worth around $4,000,
which adjusted for inflation would be about $83,000 today. As he testified, May Bannister shouted
out, That's enough of your lies, I'll throw something at you. Defense counsel Lambert urged
his client to stop, but she continued, I won't keep quiet, he's going on lying too long. And then
she put her head into her hands crying as she cowered in her seat. There were quite a few dramatic
moments like this. Albert backed up the testimony that Francis had given that one of the knives
found in the rubble was identical to one owned by Daniel Bannister. He said he had seen Daniel's
knife before at the Bannister home, but he never saw May Bannister with a baby or a life-sized baby
doll. He said after May begged him to continue visiting, he did for a few more weeks, but each
time he started to get the feeling that he wasn't needed as much. He would say, quote,
There was a falling off in the friendship and they seem to be more taken with James Sargent,
who had a car and I did not. James Sargent was a colleague of Albert Powell's and he often
assisted the Bannister family by driving them into Moncton. The court heard that when May was
originally asked to provide proof that the baby was hers, James Sargent was one of the people
she named as having seen or spoken to her in Moncton while she was holding the baby. But James
shook his head. He testified that he saw May with a bundle that he assumed was a baby. He never saw
an actual baby and neither did the other people that may named James Sargent spoke about a strange
request that may made of him. Later on that evening, he asked her if the baby was a boy or a girl,
and she told him never mind. And then she specifically asked him not to mention anything
about the baby to his colleague, Albert Powell. Defense counsel Lambert insinuated that Albert
had been engaging in sexual activity with Francis and Marie Bannister, arguing that there was no way
that all his generosity was for religious reasons alone. Albert categorically denied it, making
it clear that he was greatly offended by the suggestion. He stated he had no other intention
but to give the impoverished Bannisters a helping hand, and his only interest in the teenage girls
was that of a friend. Francis had started her testimony again with her version of what happened
at the Lake Family Shack in the early morning hours of January 6th, 1936. Again, she didn't
implicate her mother in any way. But she did admit that in the months beforehand,
May had expressed a desire to adopt a baby girl. Her mother couldn't read or write, so Francis was
asked to write some letters to several hospitals and orphanages, requesting to adopt a baby.
Evidently, that plan didn't work out. Francis was asked about the life-sized baby doll that
investigators had found at her home, and she insisted it had been purchased as a Christmas
gift for 13-year-old Marie, and the reason they had removed the squeaker was because apparently
Marie didn't like the noise. Francis also claimed that the bottles and baby clothes found at the
house went with the doll. It was all part of Marie's Christmas gift. There were other witnesses
who testified about May Bannisters' past deceit. One woman operated a rooming house and knew May
six years earlier under a different name, Mrs. Benny Hughes. She told the jury that May suddenly
showed up again in December of 1935, just weeks before the Lake Family murders, and she reported
that her husband Benny Hughes had been burned in a fire. But she had a new husband now, a farmer
named Trites, who apparently provided a comfortable home for her and her three children,
which now included a baby. The witness testified, quote,
I know now that she lied to me about being married to a man named Trites and that Benny Hughes had
been burned up in a jail fire. When she was at my home six years ago, she never mentioned her boys
or two girls. Another witness testified that May Bannister did housework for him about five or
six years earlier, but he knew her as Rosie Hughes. When asked if he was positive that the woman he
knew was the same one in the prisoner's dock, he replied, Yes, I'd know her if I met her in my porridge
dish. Like the other witness, he said May showed back up just a few weeks before the Lake Family
murders, asking to stay because she was on her way to visit a sick aunt and had no money to stay at
a hotel. She didn't mention anything about a baby. And there was no information about whether the
Crown considered these interactions related to the Lake Family murders, but it certainly showed
that May Bannister was no stranger to manipulation and not afraid to feed people lies.
The Crown summarized the case in closing arguments. May Bannister wanted Milton
Trites and Albert Powell to provide her family with more money, goods and food, but she didn't
want to beg. She wanted to put a moral obligation on them to continue to be personally generous,
and she decided a baby would be the perfect way. She accused Albert Powell of getting 13-year-old
Marie pregnant, but after he expressed his outrage at the suggestion, she immediately backed down.
But when it came to Milton Trites, it was a bit easier because it appeared that the two had a
casual intimate relationship. So this time, she told him she was the one who was pregnant,
the child was his, and the baby was due in the next month or two. Believing there was a possibility
it was true, Milton stepped up right away to provide for the upcoming arrival. Meanwhile,
May Bannister had been working to procure a real baby. She knew that Philip Lake's common-law wife
was due to give birth, and she sent her sons over to see if Philip would let them have the baby.
May likely assumed that the Lake family baby was unplanned and unwanted, and the couple might welcome
someone else to provide for her. But Philip Lake laughed at them, no one was taking his baby.
May had also assumed that it would be easy to find a baby to adopt, but it wasn't. And the clock was
ticking. She told Milton she would be leaving soon to give birth, so she had to come up with some
solution quickly. The evidence shows she took off to Monkton, where she bundled up a life-sized
baby doll and carried it around, telling her acquaintances that she'd just given birth.
This stopgap measure didn't fool anyone in Monkton, but it at least bought her some time to
figure out how to get a real baby. The crown asserted that as May became more desperate,
she hatched the plan for her sons to kidnap that Lake family baby and then persuaded them to execute
the plan, effectively turning them into murderers and kidnappers. The Gazette reported that May
Bannister, who was dressed in a brown winter coat, dark blue hat and a blue dress,
cried continuously as she had throughout her trial. The defence claimed the crown hadn't
shown any link between May Bannister and the kidnapping, and she might not have even been
awake when Arthur, Daniel and Francis arrived home with baby Betty that night, but no one believed
that was true. The jury found May Bannister guilty of harboring a child with intent to
assist the abductor who committed the crime. Still sobbing since the first day of the proceedings
had begun, May Bannister was led back into her cell to await her sentencing hearing.
Presiding judge Justice J. H. Barrie sentenced May Bannister to three and a half years in prison.
He commented that never before has he seen such a case in the courts of New Brunswick.
Because there were no female cell blocks in the old Dorchester County Jail in New Brunswick,
May Bannister was taken to Kingston Penitentiary, Ontario to serve her sentence.
The bizarre and twisted story of the Bannister family had captured national and international
headlines. In Texas, the El Paso Times published a feature titled, Still a Mystery,
The Murder of Three for a Baby Nobody Wants. It described May Bannister as a quote,
scowling Amazon of the bush, and her four children were quote, born and raised with
scarcely more attention than a litter of timber wolves receives and hardly as much food.
These children were Daniel, not very bright, Arthur, slack jawed but sharp, Francis,
dark, solid and attractive, and Marie, undenourished and neurotic.
The San Francisco Examiner was just one of several papers in the United States who published a
syndicated full-page story with photos under the headline, The Last Chapter of Canada's
Dole Baby Murder. The sub-headline read, quote, The two young Bannister brothers go to the gallows
for a strange crime of the desolate north, proving again that the Mounties always get their man.
The article was accompanied by a rather grim illustration of Daniel and Arthur Bannister
simultaneously killing Philip Lake while setting fire to the shack,
hitting Bertha Ring with the butt of a rifle as she ran out of the house with little Jackie,
while Sister Francis ran off with baby Betty.
Defense counsel Lambert continued to represent the Bannister family to the best of his ability,
first lodging an appeal for Arthur's conviction. He complained that the gruesome crime scene photos
may have unfairly prejudiced the jury against Arthur and that the crown had only presented
circumstantial evidence. It had not proved that the Bannisters had gone to the house for any
illegal or nefarious purpose. He suggested several other explanations for what might have happened
that night. For example, Arthur might have been rescuing Bertha from an abusive relationship,
or perhaps the murders were committed in self-defense. He also suggested that Francis Bannister may
have been much more involved than she admitted to. The appeal judges dismissed this, commenting that
these points were pretty hard to swallow, and they couldn't see any circumstances that implicated
15-year-old Francis as being an accomplice to the murders. Lambert used his judgment to appeal
Daniel Bannister's conviction on the same grounds. If there was nothing that implicated Francis,
he argued, then there wouldn't be anything to implicate Daniel. On this, the appeal judges
agreed. They found it was the crown's responsibility to prove that Daniel knew, or ought to have known,
that murder was a probable consequence of their plan to kidnap the baby. And because the trial
judge had failed to tell the jury that this was the very point they had to decide, a new trial
was ordered for Daniel Bannister. The original three trials had all been held in March of 1936.
After the guilty verdicts, a date had been set for the brothers to be hanged,
but it was postponed when Daniel was granted a new trial, just in case Arthur was called to testify.
Daniel's second trial started at the end of June. The court heard testimony from all the
same witnesses as the first trial, including Francis. Except this time, the defence insisted that the
RCMP officers leave the courtroom, complaining that they may have influenced the 15-year-old
last time she testified and they might do it again. Francis' testimony was the same.
You'll remember there was some controversy around a statement Daniel had dictated and signed
after he'd been arrested, the one that cleared himself while implicating his brother Arthur.
The statement had been inadmissible as evidence, but the Crown tried to have it admitted again at
Daniel's second trial. This time, the defence didn't mind that the statement implicated Arthur,
since Arthur had already been found guilty. The main issue this time was whether Daniel gave
the statement voluntarily, without threats or inducements. At Daniel's first trial, the defence
had argued that he made a comment before giving this statement that indicated he had been motivated
by a fear of being sent to the gallows. So this time, the Crown called two RCMP investigators
who were present, one who typed out the statement and they both testified that Daniel dictated
his statement voluntarily. But on cross-examination, one of the investigators confirmed that the
genesis of the statement was actually Daniel's cellmate, who had approached them to let them
know Daniel had been talking about the murders and had even drawn a map of the crime scene.
The investigator said they sent the cellmate back to get more information,
and he returned with the map and directed them to another inmate who reported that he too
had heard Daniel talking about the murders. The investigator denied the defence's suggestion
that they offered $500 to this inmate if they could get Daniel to talk more. The investigator
strenuously denied this and both inmates also testified that Daniel spoke freely to them
about wanting to make a statement. At this trial, the only witness for the defence was
Daniel Bannister himself, and he testified he couldn't remember giving the statement at all.
In the end, it was again deemed inadmissible as evidence.
Neither Daniel nor Arthur Bannister had testified in their own defence in their
original trials, so Daniel's choice to testify at his second trial attracted attention.
It was the first time either of the Bannister boys had told their side of the story in court.
Daniel's testimony was fairly consistent with the testimony given by his sister Francis,
but there were a few key differences. Francis had testified that she went to the Lakeshack to
keep Daniel company, but Daniel testified the opposite. He implied that Francis told him that
Bertha Lake was going to, quote, run away from her husband and asked Daniel to keep her company.
It seemed that this might have been related to one of the alternative explanations that the
defence had presented at the previous trial, that the Bannisters might have been rescuing
Bertha from an abusive relationship with her common-law husband Philip Lake. But witnesses
had described the Lake family as being sociable and fairly happy. There was no evidence that
there was abuse or any kind of disharmony in their relationship. In any event, Daniel stated
he had not gone there with the intent to do any harm. He told the jury that after he and Francis
arrived at the shack on the night in question, they waited outside until Arthur appeared at the
door with, quote, a bundle that he pushed into Francis's arms and then fled with them from the
building. Despite the fact that Arthur had already been found guilty of murder, it appeared that
Daniel was trying to downplay his brother's involvement in the murders, although he never
said as much. He insisted that he and Francis didn't go any further than the front door of
the shack and that he took no part in the murders. Daniel testified about what he saw and heard as
they ran home, quote, while we were going through the woods, I saw the sky red and heard what sounded
like a woman scream. He said he asked what was happening and either his brother or sister told
him to, quote, keep quiet and keep going. Daniel Bannister told the jury that at that time he had
no idea what the bundle held. And in fact, he didn't even know it was a baby until after they
arrived home. But as you'll remember, it took four hours for Daniel and Francis to trek through
the snow to get to the lake home. So it's highly doubtful that Daniel completed the same trek back
home without noticing that a four-month-old baby was along for the ride. The jury again found
Daniel Bannister guilty of murder, but this time they did not recommend clemency. It appeared
that Daniel's decision to testify had backfired. The judge immediately sentenced him to hang
along with his brother on September 23, 1936. Defence Council Murray Lambert ended up appealing
Daniel's conviction to the Supreme Court of New Brunswick. Perhaps he would be able to save
Daniel from a death sentence. He claimed that Daniel's testimony was more consistent with
that, and claimed the only thing the Crown had to rely on was the evidence given by Francis,
but she said nothing that proved Daniel knew anything more about what they were doing that
night than she did. Lambert also argued that the trial judge made an error when instructing the
jury, and that there had been grounds for a verdict of manslaughter in Daniel Bannister's case.
The Chief Justice responded that there were no reasonable circumstances that proved Philip
Lake's death was the result of manslaughter. Crown Prosecutor Hughes argued that the testimony
Francis gave was consistent across all the trials, and the only reasonable conclusion to be drawn
was that the Bannisters had intended to commit murder or get the Lake baby at any cost. And
what's more, he stated that the testimony Francis gave actually provided enough evidence to warrant
a conviction of murder against her as well. It appears that the only reason she wasn't charged
was because she had been detained as a witness to testify against her brothers and mother instead,
but now they'd all been convicted, so Francis wasn't needed anymore.
In a cruel twist of fate after Daniel's appeal was dismissed, the Crown approved a charge of
kidnapping for Francis Bannister, just five days before both of her brothers were due to be executed.
Preparations were underway at the Old Dorchester County Jail for the first
double-hanging in 12 years. The last one was in 1924, when four men were sent to the gallows
for committing a bank robbery in Montreal that went horribly wrong, leaving a bank employee dead.
As preparations continued, Defense Counsel Lambert also continued to represent the Bannister family,
this time with last-ditch tactics to try and spare the lives of the brothers.
He was now working on executive clemency and had requested intervention from the Governor
in Council, but two days before the hanging date, a telegram was sent from Ottawa that stated there
would be no reprieve or commutation of their sentences. The last chance to save their lives
was gone. Historically, hangings were done publicly and onlookers were encouraged,
in part because it was believed that the public display of such terror would deter anyone else
from committing a crime or defying the authorities. Of course, studies have shown this isn't true
and public executions likely inspire more violence. Public hangings were outlawed in
Canada in 1870. To prepare for this private double-hanging inside Dorchester County Jail,
scaffolding was erected behind the prison walls as well as a makeshift gallows.
Canada's official executioner Arthur Alice was summoned to carry out the sentences.
This was a very high-profile case and public opinion was divided. Some people were happy to
see Arthur and Daniel Bannister sent to the gallows for the murder of the Lake family,
but others were outraged that two young men had been sentenced to death when they were only
carrying out a plot masterminded by their devious mother, who got off lightly with only three and
a half years in prison. The Montreal Gazette quoted officials at the prison who said the
brothers were in good spirits. They'd been eating and sleeping well and had been visited by a member
of the Salvation Army. Their elderly father, William Bannister, and sisters Francis and Marie
had been permitted to visit them to say goodbye. Despite the fact that their sister's testimony
was a key factor in their trip to the gallows, they showed no ill will towards Francis.
They both hugged her and Arthur told her he hoped that, quote,
nothing happened in the trial. I won't see you anymore, but you be a good girl.
Their mother, Mae Bannister, was still in Kingston Penitentiary in Ontario
and reportedly was not permitted to speak with her sons to say goodbye before they were executed.
When the time came on September 23, 1936, Arthur and Daniel Bannister were called from their cell
and led to the makeshift gallow. Standing back to back on the trapdoor as the nooses were placed
around their necks, Daniel complained, quote, it's too tight, I can't pray.
According to the Windsor Star, a spectator believed they heard him mumble, quote,
innocent and paying for somebody else's crime.
The bodies of Arthur and Daniel Bannister were placed into a single wooden coffin,
which was buried in a fresh grave dug on the grounds of the old Dorchester County Jail.
Enthusiastic locals gathered to watch as two members of the family that had captured their
attention for the previous nine months were buried in a jailyard grave. The same rope used
to end their lives was also used to lower their coffin into the ground.
Just two days later, Francis Bannister appeared in juvenile court, charged with kidnapping.
But it was all over very quickly because the Attorney General's office stepped in
and requested that the charges be withdrawn. There's little information about the reasons
for this, but it can be assumed that Francis had dealt with more than enough trauma. The 15-year-old
had been in custody for nine months by this point, held as a material witness and only allowed out
when the state needed her to testify. And after her brothers had been sent to the gallows and
her mother was sentenced to jail time, Francis was no longer needed so she could finally be charged
with kidnapping. It would have been cruel and unusual punishment, but luckily it was over.
The local media reported that Francis walked free from the courtroom with her father and it was
presumed that she went back to live with him and her sister Marie in the same ramshackle
home where the inception of the twisted kidnap murder plot had occurred.
According to online records, William Bannister only lived for six more years and passed away
aged 80. Francis Bannister never married and sadly died of tuberculosis in 1947,
five years after her father. She was just 26 years old. Marie Bannister got married at 17 to a 24-year-old
labourer. She went on to give birth to four children and died a widow in 1998, aged 75. Her mother,
May Bannister, lived until she was 74 years old, dying in 1969. And finally there's Little Betty
Lake, the baby at the centre of May Bannister's murder-kidnap extortion plot. When the trials
were happening in 1936, local papers reported she had been placed in the care of a relative
who had made a formal application to adopt her. The adoption was successful, but the details
of Betty's life after that are scarce. It seemed she got married at some point, never had any
children, and died in 1991 in St John New Brunswick. She was 55 years old. The old Dorchester County
jail was the location of the last double-hanging in Canada and also the place where the Bannister
brothers were buried on site. Now the heritage-listed building is the only privately-owned provincial
jail in Canada, and it goes by the Dorchester Jail Airbnb. There's photos and more information
on the website DorchesterJail.com. If the rave reviews are anything to go by, it's an extremely
popular destination for visitors who want to experience one night staying in one of the
jail cells that the Bannister brothers may have called home for a time back in 1936.
Thanks for listening and special thanks to Eileen McFarlane from CrimeLapse for her work on
researching and writing this case. For the full list of resources we relied on to write this episode
and anything else you want to know about the podcast, visit the page for each episode at
CanadianTrueCrime.ca. Canadian True Crime donates monthly to charitable organizations that help
those facing injustice. This month we have donated to the Canadian Resource Centre for Victims of
Crime who offer support, research and education to survivors, victims and their families. You can
learn more at CRCVC.ca or see a link in the show notes. Thank you so much as always for your kind
ratings, reviews, messages and support. I wish I had time to reply to them all but please know I
am so grateful. Audio editing and production was by We Talk of Dreams who also composed the theme
songs. Production assistance was by Jesse Hawke with script consulting by Carol Weinberg. Writing,
narration, sound design and additional research was by me and the disclaimer was voiced by Eric
Crosby.