Canadian True Crime - The Murder of Daniel Levesque - Part 2: Interview with Daniel's mom
Episode Date: January 25, 2019In this second part of the story, Jordan from The Nighttime Podcast interviews Daniel's mom, Stacey—revealling more details that will make anyone with a respect for justice scream.Subscribe to The N...ighttime Podcast on Apple Podcast.Visit The Nighttime Podcast websiteSupport the show. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, this is part 2 of the story of the murder of Daniel Levec, a case I covered
collaboratively with the Nighttime podcast.
If you haven't listened to part 1 yet, I'd encourage you to listen to that right now.
If you did listen already, this part 2 is a must listen.
As I mentioned, in this part, Jordan from Nighttime interviews Daniel's amazing mum
Stacey, who unpacks the story from the perspective of Daniel's family, going into more detail
about the crazy web of lies spun by Joshua Brado.
Stacey also talks about Daniel's life, including the first tragedy the family suffered, the
loss of Daniel's little brother Christian, when Daniel was only three and a half, and
how the family recovered.
Stacey goes on to talk more about the legal battles, including the controversy over Daniel's
autopsy where his cause of death was surprisingly attributed to cocaine toxicity, instead of
being hit in the head with a hammer.
She then talks about the constant stalls in the court case, and then Joshua's plea
deal in how it affected the family, before updating us on the latest infuriating turn
and where they are now.
You are going to scream.
You'll also hear the only song that Daniel ever recorded professionally, just days before
his death.
This was the session that was unfortunately paid for by Joshua Brado, but there is a
heartwarming tale behind how it was finished off after Daniel's death.
So please take a listen, and afterwards make sure you subscribe to the Nighttime podcast.
It's one of my favorites.
You are tuned to the Nighttime podcast, focused on the fringe of Canada.
Welcome back to a collaborative two-part series covering the life and the tragic death of
Daniel Mbac.
In part one of this series, Christy Lee on the Canadian True Crime podcast shared a narrative
account of the twists, turns, lies, and the violence that led to 20-year-old musician
Daniel Lavec being found beaten to death in a Victoria, B.C. condo.
We learned how Daniel, a Salt of the Earth kind of guy from small town Ravelstoke, B.C.,
moved to the comparatively big city of Victoria to pursue his dream of finding a career as
a performing musician.
Tragically, Daniel would only get a handful of weeks in Victoria to make things happen,
as his time there and the dreams that brought him there would be snuffed out by the manager
of the 7-Eleven Daniel had taken a job at.
That manager, Josh Brito, befriended Daniel and weaved an intricate web of lies that played
off Daniel's kindness, generosity, and his trusting nature.
The lies would finally catch up to them both when Daniel showed up to what he thought was
Josh's condo in what he expected to be an orientation for a new career as a legal secretary
for Josh's mother's law firm.
Instead, Daniel only found betrayal.
There was no orientation, no job, there wasn't even a law firm.
There was just the manager of the 7-Eleven, Josh Brito, a man Daniel thought to be a friend,
but he couldn't have been more wrong.
As Josh attacked the much smaller Daniel with a hammer, all the while preventing his desperate
escape, the true nature of their relationship was revealed, but only when it was far too
late.
Josh was obsessed with Daniel, and the lies had been little more than Josh's way to pursue
a sexual relationship with the heterosexual employee of the 7-Eleven he managed.
In tonight's episode, we'll dig even deeper into this story that should make anyone with
a respect for justice scream.
I'll be joined by another victim in this senseless crime, Daniel Levec's courageous
mother, Stacy Thur.
When Christy and I decided to collaborate on this story, we did so with the goal of not
only telling the story of Daniel's death, but celebrating his life and highlighting
the injustice his family received from Canada's legal system.
To take us on this uncomfortable walk through a mother and a family's worst nightmare,
I invited Daniel's mom, Stacy Thur, to join us.
Although what we discuss is at times hard to listen to, and even harder to imagine,
Daniel's mom felt it important that people know this story.
Both the good and the bad, as hard as that part is to tell.
What will come next is portions of our extended conversation about her amazing son Daniel,
his life, the legacy he left behind, and the darkness that sadly snuck its way into his
story.
We'll start at the beginning, the very, very beginning.
When I first, I don't know that I was expecting Daniel, I was 20 years old and it was an unexpected
pregnancy and pretty scary at the time.
His father, Stephen and I were high school sweethearts and scared and young and all that,
but once Daniel came along and re-changed our life completely, forced us to grow up
and be parents.
He was just a joy from the very beginning.
Where in Canada was it that he was born?
He was actually born in Kamloops, B.C., only because I had some complications with my pregnancy,
but we did live in Rubble Stoke at the time.
He was fine.
He was a little tiny, little baby, only five pounds, ten ounces, but big personality right
from the get-go.
He was super funny and extremely intelligent.
Before he could even talk, he would wake up in his crib singing and singing.
Singing songs that didn't have words, they were melodies that he would make up.
I don't know how a six and seven month old infant can know how to make a melody without
knowing music was just quite amazing.
We always marveled at it quite a bit.
Like I say, did everything really early.
He walked early.
He talked early.
He didn't talk.
He didn't ever shut up.
He was such a talker and he was articulate and thoughtful and very, very sensitive, little
heart even when he was a child.
When he was 21 months old, we had our second child and his name is Christian.
He was the apple of Daniel's little eyes.
He just thought his baby brother was the best thing ever.
He was the best thing ever.
When Daniel was three and his baby brother was just over a year, their dad and I split
up and both of us remained in Revelstoke at the time.
He's very much a part of their lives.
We stayed fairly good friends for most of the time and agreed that raising our boys
to love each parent was paramount and that's what we did.
I've read a lot of your blog where you share a lot of real personal information.
One of the things you shared on the blog was the story of a loss your family suffered
early in Daniel's life, that being his younger brother.
Just tell me a bit about how that affected Daniel as a young boy living with that type
of loss.
Yeah.
When Daniel was three and a half years old, February 17th in 1995, my mother and my grandmother
had come to visit us for Christian's birthday, his second birthday was approaching and we
were having a little party with all his friends and they arrived on a Thursday night and the
boys and I went and picked them up from the Greyhound station and brought them back to
our house.
My grandmother had my room and Daniel and my mother were sharing Daniel's room and the
baby had his own room and a crib and it was about 10 o'clock in the morning and the baby
still hadn't woke up for the morning so I went in to go wake him up because he was wanting
to visit with his grandmothers and he had passed away in the night with a terrible, terrible
thing.
Clearly, Daniel was standing right by my side when I found him in his crib and of course
started screaming hysterically and Daniel was asking me, Mummy, what's wrong with the
baby?
Consequently, without any real cause of death known, they attributed it to sudden infant
death syndrome and so here was my three and a half year old little boy, now my only child
that had to watch me go through and his father of course go through burying his little brother
and not understanding why his brother wasn't around anymore and it affected his life.
Not in necessarily a negative way and more of a life too short kind of way.
He was so compassionate and even when he was still so small, I would start to cry and he
would be watching his cartoons and he'd just reach over and he'd wipe the tears from my
eyes and he'd say, don't cry, Mummy, and he would continually do that day after day.
Here was my three, then four, then five year old son.
He would even knew then how hurt it was for a mother to have to bury a child.
He recognized early, early, early on in his life that he was different than most kids
because he knew loss but knowing loss always, you know, you don't know true joy until you've
had true loss and he knew that.
We were very open about all of that, always answering questions.
He did go to counseling for a while when he was very small but they really thought that
he was processing this loss quite well and I think he really did but it was always a little
empty spot in his heart for obvious reasons and he just missed his little brother and
we talked about him a lot though.
Now aside from, you know, experiencing loss like this early on, what else do you see as some
defining moments in Daniel's life that helped shape the man he became?
Well, music was a huge deal to him and he was a poet and a singer and he wrote things all the
times, poems and writings of things that just blew your mind to be honest.
He called himself the boy who thinks and song.
Everything was about music, you know, how he spoke, how he wrote, how he processed his feelings.
Mommy, you've got to listen to this song.
Just listen to this song, listen to the words.
He'd say to me all the time and music's always been a very big part of my life too.
I, our family sings all the time.
We're singing in the shower, we're singing to our cats, it was our life.
Music was our life and music was what made him who he was, for sure.
A lot of the story that we'll talk about takes place in Victoria,
BC and I understand his motivation to leave home and go to Victoria had a lot to do with
his interest in music.
Can you talk a bit about when he decided to go to Victoria and what his, his reasoning was?
Absolutely.
He just to back it up a tiny little bit when Daniel, Daniel was very intelligent, pretty
much a straight A student throughout his whole high school career.
We all had elementary, we all had huge hopes for him.
He wanted to be all sorts of things while he was growing up and they were, you know,
from a doctor to a chef to anything that would use his brains and his creativity.
And he was really, really excited about his future.
And then when he was in the boat, when I think when he was about 18 years old, he said,
you know, mom, I decided what I want to do for a living.
And I said, what's that?
And he said, well, I think I want to move to Seattle and work in a coffee shop so I can play my music.
And I was like, oh, that's not really going to university.
But that dream of doing that in Seattle changed to Victoria.
He had some two wonderfully close friends who were brother and sister and they were encouraging him
to come west.
And so one day he just said, mom, I want to move to Victoria.
And I was so happy to hear that because I, Revelstoke's a very small community.
And I thought Daniel needed to be somewhere bigger.
He really had kind of outgrown Revelstoke and his music, he just wanted to play music.
So he packed up what little he owned and decided I'm going off to Victoria.
I'm going to find a job and I'm going to play my music and I'm going to get discovered.
And it was really, I very much encouraged him to move to Victoria.
I thought it would be so great for him.
And how old was Daniel when he did move to Victoria?
He moved to Victoria in June of 2011, which was just after his 20th birthday,
his birthday was March 25th.
He spent his birthday in Revelstoke, but moved about a week and a little bit over a week later.
And I understand from the time he arrived in Victoria, it wasn't very long until
he crossed paths with who would become his killer, Josh Brito.
Can you tell me about how Daniel and Josh became connected, how that happened?
Absolutely, yeah.
So Daniel was hoping for this one job when he arrived in Victoria.
And when that didn't work out, he decided he better hit the pavement looking for a job.
And on this particular day, I'm not 100% sure exactly the day that I'd have to look,
but it would be about the middle of June.
He said, I'm going to take the bus into the city with one of my friends,
and we're going to go to the work BC it's called here where you can look for jobs
and write resumes and things.
And I'm going to find something and I'm going to apply it all sorts of places.
He's pretty excited about it.
I wished him the best.
And as the story went, he said he got off the bus and the bus stopped outside the 7-Eleven.
And there was a big, we're hiring sign in the window.
So he thought, well, I'll apply there first.
He walked into that 7-Eleven and asked if he could speak to the manager
because he was wishing to apply for a job.
Later on that day, he messaged me and said, Mom, he just put,
he told me that exact story and said, I never remade it to work BC.
The manager came out from the back room at 7-Eleven and he hired me on the spot.
I start tomorrow.
And I was like, well, good for you, Daniel.
And he said, maybe don't tell everybody that I work at 7-Eleven.
It'll only be temporary, Mom.
But he said, I need to start somewhere.
And the manager seemed to really like me and I'm looking forward to starting there.
And of course, the manager was Josh Burrito at the time,
although Daniel didn't know him by that name, that he introduced himself as Josh Buxton to Daniel.
We know from court, he'd seen Daniel on the close circuit television and he came out to look at him.
And when he hired him on the spot, he said to Daniel, you look just like the lead senior from Hedley.
That just really, that was the beginning of the stars in Daniel's eyes.
I think that he just, this guy thought he was great already and he only known him for five minutes.
So that was how they met.
And he did start the next day.
And their friendship started that day as well and just progressed until August 3rd.
But, you know, again, this was the middle of June and Daniel died on August 3rd.
So it really wasn't that much time to get to know each other.
But in that time, they did a lot of things.
So that was how they were introduced.
When I hear the stories of Daniel and Josh's relationship, the word that comes to mind to
me is like grooming.
It seems like Josh was really trying to win Daniel over and exaggerate his position in the world,
Josh's position in the world, that is.
Are you aware of when this really started with Josh again, quote unquote, grooming Daniel?
Yes, actually, it started literally on the very first day that he started work.
I remember receiving a text from Daniel saying, Mom, my new boss is so cool.
He, you know, he, he, I don't really understand why Josh felt that he had to build himself up to
Daniel. I mean, Daniel was such an easygoing kid who just liked everybody.
And he, I imagine that if Josh had been honest about who he was, Daniel would have cared for
him as a friend as much as he did with the stories.
But yeah, I don't disagree with the word grooming in a way because he started from the beginning.
And one of the first things that he shared with Daniel was that his parents were both
wealthy lawyers that owned a law firm in Calgary and wanted Victoria.
He told Daniel that he owned, that his parents owned an upscale apartment right downtown, Victoria.
And that, that's where he lived. He explained to Daniel that he had no bills whatsoever,
that the, he just worked at the 7-Eleven for extra money.
So this is how he could afford all these fancy dinners and that, you know, going out
to the bars and buying Daniel drinks and plying him with anything that Daniel wished for and what
he wished for. He also told Daniel that he was involved in a, with a mayoral candidate in Victoria
who was running for, for mayor that year and that he was his political advisor is what Josh said and
that he knew all sorts of people. And I remember Daniel telling me a story that they were walking
down government street in Victoria and stopped this man who was some sort of a politician.
And he said, Oh, well, I don't remember the man's name. I don't know if I ever knew,
but Daniel said, Mom, it was so cool. Josh stopped him right in the middle of the street and said,
Oh, so-and-so, I want you to meet my friend Daniel. And Daniel, this is the finance minister for
British Columbia. The gentleman, you know, shook Daniel's hand and, and you know, Daniel was in
awe. He's like, man, Josh knows so many very important people. When in fact, you know, I imagine
this finance minister was probably just shook everybody's hand and, and Josh made it sound
like he knew him personally. That's how Daniel saw it, which I'm sure he did not know that person
at all. Sorry to pull you into the conversation, but I want to take a moment to set up what you're
about to hear. During our talk, Stacy and I spent a significant amount of time discussing the near
endless and puzzlingly elaborate lies that Josh Brito constructed, presumably to impress and gain
the attention of her son, Daniel. This section of our talk, sadly, could have formed a series of
episodes, but in the interest of time and clarity, I'll instead highlight the lies that most closely
relate to the events leading to Daniel's death. After we take a short break, you'll hear some pieces
of the conversation that I see as sort of a collage. I suppose you could call this section
of the episode, Josh Brito's Collage of Deceit. We'll get to that right after this break.
He gave a big sob story to Daniel. Daniel had basically broken up with a girlfriend,
his longtime girlfriend from Norway at when he was in Victoria's when they broke up.
He had a bit of a broken heart and Josh explained to Daniel that he had a fiance that had just
broken up with him. Josh explained she had dumped him for no real reason. He explained to Daniel that
his mother, Josh's mother had bought him and his fiancee an all-inclusive ticket and trip to Cuba,
but now she couldn't go because now they were broken up. Eventually, within a couple of weeks
of knowing Daniel and asked Daniel if he maybe wanted her ticket, Daniel just thought that was
the best idea ever. Daniel had never really been anywhere except Norway, never been anywhere hot,
and he just thought that would be such a great idea. He explained to me very many times how
he felt that him and Josh were helping each other get over their broken heart.
He also told Daniel that he himself had been in law school. He had only one year left to become a
lawyer, but he quit because his father had fallen ill with cancer, terminal cancer in fact, and had
subsequently died a few months before he met Daniel. After his father's death, they found out
that his father had taken on a lover that had produced a child, and now this woman was contesting
the will because she had an heir to this massive fortune that the father had left behind and that
the whole family was in upheaval because of it. All of this is not true at all, but Daniel felt
so sorry, but you know, poor Josh had so much on his plate, like here he is, the glue to his family,
and trying to help them all to roll the pair of their time with his father's estate. Plus,
his girlfriend had just bumped him. It was just one, like a sympathetic story after another,
just playing on Daniel's heart string. You know, I think Daniel said to me one time,
I don't know why bad things happen to good people.
What we have found out since, of course, is that Josh did have a girlfriend. He liked her very
much. He met her family. They all knew him. They thought he was a great guy. Once Daniel came into
his life and hired on, everything changed with their relationship. He stopped talking to her.
He started lying to her. He was making up things. She was getting very frustrated,
and would never let Daniel and her meet. He kept those two parts of his lives very compartmentalized,
and the one and only time that their paths crossed, she had come into 7-Eleven, and he introduced
Daniel to her as one of the regional managers of 7-Eleven, and he said,
don't talk to her. She's not a very nice person. So Daniel stayed away, thinking that she was
this regional manager. In fact, after speaking with her, which I have many times, I found out that
it was actually her, and she couldn't understand why Daniel wouldn't talk to her. Daniel was afraid
to speak to her because she was apparently very mean to Josh, which isn't true. He made very
big efforts to keep the two of them away from each other so that there was never any known
relationship between any of them. All the while emitting later on, of course,
Josh saying that his feelings for Daniel were changing, and they weren't healthy feelings,
and he was attracted to him on more than a friend level, which he knew very well that Daniel was
not that he was attracted to women, and the hand was dating a few women and had gone on some dates,
and Daniel didn't know. Daniel didn't know that he was gay.
Now, those were just a sample of the lies and misrepresentations Josh had fabricated during
the two months he knew Daniel. But in this quickly escalating game of dishonesty,
Josh was about to take a big step, one that would soon lead to Daniel learning the true
nature of their relationship, tragically when it was far too late. As we get back to the conversation,
Stacey will describe the non-existent job at the imaginary law firm that Josh promised Daniel.
So I would say at the end of July, I started getting messages from Daniel
about this law firm in Victoria was looking for a new legal secretary, this law firm that does
not exist. Let's keep that in mind as I tell this story, but Josh coached Daniel to believe
that Josh had spoken to his mother, who was the president of this law firm, and that they were
to meet Daniel because he highly recommended Daniel as a potential legal secretary that could
be trained on the job. The mother apparently agreed and thought that this was a great idea,
and hired Daniel just on Josh's words. Josh would very often type messages to his mother,
and I sang quotations, accidentally send them to Daniel, and then say, oh, sorry,
that one was for my mom, but any messages he was saying, things like, oh, Daniel,
so good with people, he's so smart, he's such a quick learner, you know, and all these things,
and blah, blah, blah. So Daniel was very excited, so excited, as a matter of fact,
he'd given a two-week notice at the 7-11. He was going to go to work for this law firm
in the downtown Victoria, and he gave his two-week notice to be finished in and around
the middle of August, so that he could come home, wanted to have a little visit with us,
plus they were, of course, going to Cuba, because Daniel had agreed to go with Josh to Cuba on
the state holiday that didn't exist. I saw Daniel for the last time on July 31st, I believe it was.
I was in Vancouver, Daniel took the ferry over from Victoria to Vancouver, and had
a nice beautiful dinner with my grandmother, and Daniel was explaining to us how, I don't know,
he was so excited about this new job, he was going to meet his new boss on August 1st,
she was flying in from Calgary to meet Daniel, and they were going to start an orientation.
I asked him at that time, you know, do I need to help you buy some clothes, maybe? Like,
should we get you some dress pants and things? And he said, no, the firm has a clothing budget,
part of my orientation will be going to a suit store, and will be buying me some suits,
it's part of my package. He did ask me at that time to make him a dentist appointment,
he had a, he felt that he needed to get his, one of his teeth fixed, and the only reason I
mentioned this is because he said, you know, I'm going to be home in the middle of August,
I'd like to go to the dentist, and then a day and a half later he messaged me and said, oh,
mom, I talked to Josh about my dentist appointment, you don't have to make it because I guess the
law firm has a very great dental plan, and I'll just do it here. So Josh had convinced him
that he would be getting paid so much more money at this law firm, he would have this
holding allowance, it would afford him the ability to buy beautiful dress clothes, he was going to
be trained for a career that Daniel would be very, you know, we looked, looked very much forward to.
And on top of it all, this very new best friend of his, his mother was going to be
Daniel's boss, and he thought that was just great. He said, August first rolled around,
and she was unable to come. Josh said, sorry, we're going to have to go for this orientation.
His younger brother Matthew had fallen ill, and he was, her mother was not allowed, was not able
to travel that day, but that she was rescheduled, her arrival to be August 3rd, when Matthew felt
better. Of course, none of that was true, no law firm, no package, no package.
Are you aware of Daniel having any doubts about Josh's stories, or would he have gone into this
completely believing the stories Josh has told and the lies he built up?
Yeah, he really did believe them. When I did see him that day, that last time that I saw him on the
July 31st, I did say to him, how come, you know, how come he's being so nice, you know, like,
whatever, I couldn't, I had some doubts. I wasn't, I don't know if I was really suspicious, but I
just thought, I said, why, why you Daniel, like, why, why would he be so interested in helping you,
and he just said, and I'm not just who he is, he's the, he's the nicest person in the world,
he's just, he's taken me under his wing, and he's just wonderful to me. My only speculation was,
I couldn't understand why he chose Daniel. As a matter of fact, I have a message that I sent to
him that said, tell him thank you. Tell him thank you from me. I'm just so happy that he's
so good to you, you know, and please tell him thank you. That was one of the last messages I sent to
him actually. No, I understand that you ended up being one of the final people that Daniel
spoke to, which turned out to be before he went to this orientation for the quote unquote law firm.
As you mentioned, it had been delayed quite a bit this meeting of Josh's mother, but
I believe when it finally was going to happen, Daniel had spoke to you shortly before going.
Can you tell me a bit about that communication? Yeah, absolutely. It was August 3rd. He
messaged me first thing in the morning and he said, this is word for word.
Good morning, mom. Wish me luck. It's my orientation day today with a bunch of happy faces,
and I said, good luck, Daniel. I'm so proud of you. I know she's going to love you. You know,
you good luck today. Just be yourself. And, you know, that's how I said it. And he was very
thankful. And then, you know, that was probably, I think, around noon that afternoon. And then at
2.30, he messaged me again and he said, I'm on my way, mom. Daniel didn't have a car, so he was
getting on. I now know he got into a bus onto a bus and he said, I'm on my way now, mom,
heading over to Josh's apartment. What he thought was Josh's apartment, which
wasn't his apartment at all, was his, that other girlfriend that he had. And I'm headed there
now, so he just let me know at 2.35, I believe, or 2.38 was the last text I got from him. And
he was dead by 5. And when, like, so you got that message at around 2.35, when did you hear that
something went wrong and something had happened? Like, how did this news get to you?
It's kind of a, well, this whole story is sad, but it's very sad. When I didn't hear from Daniel
after his orientation, his supposed orientation, I thought it was kind of unusual, especially
because he was so excited. But I did know he had other plans after and such a figured I would
speak to him in the morning. My son Joel and I went to a movie that night and got home a little
bit late. I was to be resting for work. And so the incident took place around 5 p.m. that night.
By the time it was all said and done, they went by Daniel's driver's license and found Jackson
at the house on the address on Daniel's BCID informed Jackson of what had happened. And
that was how the police at around 22 o'clock that night found out who I was. Of course,
I have a different last name than Daniel. So they were able to know from Jackson that I lived in
Revelstoke and they contacted the Revelstoke RCMP that night. The RCMP came to my house at
1 o'clock in the morning on the force and knocked and Joel and I did not hear them. They came back
again at 3 o'clock in the morning and knocked again. We didn't hear them again. And then at 8 o'clock
in the morning, it woke Joel up and it was the police. You could see them and you didn't know
why they were coming to the door. Of course, he thought it might have something to do if you
can believe this is how innocent our life used to be. Joel had a freestanding basketball net and
out in our driveway and he thought that maybe the police wanted it moved. And that was the first
thing he thought when he saw the gentleman at the door. They asked if they could speak to if I was
home and if they could speak to me and he came to get me and he said, Mom, it's the police are at
the door. And as soon as those words hit my ears, I screamed, Daniel, like I just knew something
had happened to Daniel. I don't know how I knew that, but I ran down the hallway and they said,
are you supposed to be there? And I said I was. And they said they regretted to inform me that
my son Daniel had been had died on the night before. And I collapsed in my 15 year old son's arms,
of course, fell backwards in despair. The rest of it's kind of a blur, but
there are CMP here in Rebel Stoke very kind. They brought a victim services fellow with them. He
stayed with me while I threw up in the toilet. Could only say to me by giving me a card of who
to call. I was meant to call a Victoria policeman and I don't know what he was. I only ever
spoke to this fellow once, but he was able to tell me that Daniel had been involved in an
altercation. This was a couple of hours after I found out when I was trying to piece it all
together, but he was involved in an altercation and that, you know, he wanted to know as much
as he could about Daniel and things like that from me. One of the very first things I said to
him is how's Josh and the fellow said on the other end of the phone said, why would you ask
about Josh? And I said, well, he's one of Daniel's best friends and if Daniel was out,
he would have been out. He, you know, they spent, you know, a lot of time together and I just,
if Daniel was involved in something, then Josh might be hurt too. That was, that was my first,
you know, finding that I should have thought that they were very shocked. They wanted to know,
immediately wanted to know the relationship between Daniel and Josh. And I explained to them that
they were friends, close friends, and that he was his employer. He was the manager of the 711
Victoria. And then I said, why are you asking me so many questions about Josh? And that was when
they informed me that Josh was to, was also involved in this altercation and that he was
currently being held responsible for Daniel's death. So that was my first knowledge of that.
I still didn't know what happened. People were reporting in the news that Daniel had been stabbed.
The police at that stage would not confirm or deny how Daniel died or anything. They would
could only tell me that he was dead and that Josh was in custody.
And now could you tell me when you, when you learned the story of what actually happened
in that apartment and tell me as well what, what the version of the story was that you heard?
So the police were very tight-lipped right from the beginning. What they could tell me for sure was
that there had been an altercation in that apartment that both Daniel and Josh were both,
had been both injured. And that when, once taken to the hospital, it was noted by one of the physicians
that the doctor did not think that Josh had been the victim, but probably the aggressor. Daniel
had died. Josh was superficially wounded. And it was very contrary to the story that Josh told.
When he called 911 that evening, he told the police. And then again, when they arrived,
that Daniel had freaked out on him and attacked him with a knife and stabbed him. And in retaliation,
Josh had hit him with a hammer. He, he pretended to be the victim the entire time. When they walked
in, Daniel was faced down on a pile of blankets and pillows. When they turned him over, they
recognized that he was in medical distress. He was already blue. He wasn't breathing.
When they saw Josh, he was laying on the floor, covered in blood. They treated him immediately,
took him priority to the hospital. When it came out, of course, in trial, it was determined that
the lion's share of the blood on Josh was closed, that was Daniel's blood. He had, in fact,
after having said that Daniel had stabbed him, it was determined, friendsically, that
he had attacked Daniel first and went rummaging through the drawers in the kitchen
and found a knife and stabbed himself. They know that because Daniel's blood
was in the drawer where the knife was stored. Josh's story did not add up right from the beginning.
As a matter of fact, he went straight from the hospital with band-aids because that's all he
required. He did not even require a stitch in any of his wounds. Do you have a passion project that
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the ground today. He was remanded straight away to the Victoria Police Department and and look
they didn't charge him immediately you know they had to go to a judge and and and charge him but it
was within the first two days that he was actually charged with secondary murder and then and then it
was a big job it was a it was a complete it was a huge job to determine what actually happened
because all the while for the next six years Josh would deny having anything to do with Daniel's
death and maintain that he was the victim and that everything he did was in self-defense.
What the what the police told me what was what we know and what we can prove are two different
things and they just spent years and years it felt like um doing that you know finding things
that they could use to to prove that Daniel was a victim because they they truly believed it they
knew that Daniel was the victim but thankfully we had they had such a good friends of team that
they were able to gather a lot of evidence that said they they were it was painstaking for them
they made it their point to prove that they knew that the story where Josh was telling was not true.
Initially investigators may have been reasonably certain that that Josh was the instigator but
for some reason charges were dropped shortly after they were originally laid and I understand
this had to do with the original I don't know if it was the autopsy or the or the ruling of of
how Daniel died can you talk about what led to those original charges being dropped and
Josh being basically let go I think two months after the fact? Yeah absolutely um but first of
all that the charges were never dropped they were stayed important to note that because
charges being dropped would be mean that he was no longer under investigation and that was not true
the charges were stayed which meant that until they could get more evidence they which they
intended on doing that that door was still open when they took Daniel's body to van
Kubert for the to the forensic pathologist Dr Carol Lee she did his autopsy and the manner
of death was ruled death by cocaine toxicity that's something I hadn't mentioned and feel
very uncomfortable with in all of these stories is that it was the fact that Josh was buying cocaine
and Daniel was using it as well with him but there was indeed cocaine in Daniel's body that day and
so Dr Carol Lee determined that that was the cause of death and that was a huge blow to us there
was something I was unaware of I didn't know of Daniel's drug use I didn't it wasn't a major issue
in his life it was determined by the toxicology tests the toxicologist did testify saying that
Daniel was a less than recreational user by the amounts of residue left in his body but
it was known to the investigators that the amount of cocaine that was in Daniel's body was not
of lethal dose they believed that with their whole hearts and continued to fight for Daniel
because they did not believe that Dr Lee had done a proper a proper report on on his actual autopsy
you know it was noted that Daniel had been struck on the head at least two times with a hammer so
hard that the hammer was broken the head had broken right off it was you know that's pretty hard hit
to uh back of his head to break a hammer head off of it so you know there was that as well as the
fact that he was black and blue he'd fought for his life he was screaming to be let go there were
neighbors that heard this there's neighbors that testified at trial that they heard him open the
door and say help me somebody help me and then the door slammed shut and then please let me go
please let me go you know all these factors were things that Dr Carol Lee knew and ignored as far as
we were concerned we did end up getting another forensic pathologist to look at Daniel's notes
of course he didn't ever see Daniel himself so he could only go by what on Dr Lee's notes and photos
and things like that but you know it was determined after Dr Lee looked again at Daniel changed her
manner of death to be cocaine toxicity in the setting of violence so she did acknowledge
after her second review that there was violence attributed to Daniel's death but the original
autopsy is what led to uh Josh's charges being stayed at the moment uh he was released early
December of 2011 and was to remain free until December of 2012
and what is it that changed about a year after Daniel's death that led to the charges being
put against Josh again was it the change in the in the cause of death or what was it that
it was partly the change in in the manner of death but on top of that and most importantly
they knew it wasn't self-defense but they needed to prove how they knew that and by the
interviews with the neighbors here and Daniel calling for help and knowing by reading Josh's
texts about his feelings for Daniel and his want of a sexual relationship with Daniel that they
were able to charge him with first-degree murder, forcible confinement and sexual assault. Daniel
was not sexually assaulted at the time but because the attack took place during an attempt to sexually
assault someone that immediately upgraded the murder charge to first-degree murder.
And now these charges were placed almost six years before a verdict was eventually
met or a plea was was made what led to such massive delays in this case?
Well we did go to court in 2015. It started in January of 2015 and went to March 2015. We had a
jury that had been selected that was present every day and in three months there was one delay after
another you know the defense doing their job was able to just put up roadblocks where a lot of the
evidence that we had were everything was speculation just salt in our wounds you know he was just
kept asking for recesses kept suggesting that he needed more time for this and in fact he'd had
four years to get his stuff together. There was a couple of little glitches with the crown's case
too that were unfortunate some some oversights not necessarily with evidence in itself but
just the processing of course the defense being a good defense lawyer he was able to take advantage
of those and in fact with all the delays and all the time that the jury had to have to be excused
the judge at the time did declare a mistrial in March of 2015 which a mistrial of course is not
an innocent verdict of any sort. Josh was remanded back to the Victoria prison that he was in
and we were to go back to court again the following October of course that didn't happen
either it was just another thing after another thing after another thing and yeah it just when
the Jordan decision came down in 2014 which was a decision by the Supreme Court of Canada involving
a speedy trial I knew that Josh's lawyer was arguing about that wanting to have a decision
made on his behalf regarding the amount of time that he had sat in remand he'd been in there since
December of 2012 and here it was 2016 that was a big battle for us too there was nothing that the
crown could really do law is law it was indeed a fact that he had been in remand longer than he
should have been because of legal delays because of lack of court time because of you know just
scheduling conflicts there was all sorts of stuff that was beyond so many people's control
that led to the possibility that he would be released without charges at all you must have
there was a maximum amount of time you were allowed to be in jail before having start to finish
from arrest to trial I knew that this was going to be a problem for us and it was and it definitely
was they did do the argument shortly before the plea deal was had come up they had done an argument
in front of a judge where the crown argued why we should continue on with the trial and the defense
argued why he should be released because he'd been in jail too long which was by his design
he never ever one time asked for bail he didn't ask for any kind of release he stayed in jail this
entire time and well and it benefited him to in the end having said that the judge never did come
up with a with a decision on his human rights being violated with the time frame uh because
before the judge actually made that decision the defense approached the crown with a plea
when they approached them with the plea deal I was told immediately
and part of the part of the the pros of it would be that there could be no appeal
whatever he was sentenced to whatever he was to serve would be the end of it and we would never
have to go to trial again and and for myself and my two children that was huge to me this the whole
legal battle for the last six years took such a toll on my children and myself and my finances
it was just so excruciating um another pro for the for the plea deal was that
you know the crown did make it clear that it was very likely that he may not ever get anything
he may be released with no charges at all because of the jordan decision that was a very very big
possibility and having said all that you know if that was to have happened there would have been no
accountability which was extremely important to my kids and I and to Daniel's father and not only
that but by even justice plea which was far less than what he deserved he will always have a conviction
on his record he will never be able to walk around without people knowing that he's done what he's
done and had everything been dropped and we didn't win anything he would be a free man for the rest
of his life it wouldn't be anything we could do about it so there was that too like the guarantee
of having some sort of record some sort of you know he had to he had to register his dna and you
know he had to admit something he had to say something he when you make a plea deal you have
to tell them what happened and he did tell them his version which was similar to what I thought
similar to what the crown thought I mean he couldn't keep lying anymore he had to take some
accountability and that was that was huge to me in particular and what was what was the story that
he told in his his version the story that he told uh was that he um that he had lied and that he
was in a very bad place at the time he was a heavy drug user and drinker which was unlike
his character before this is what he said he uh had developed an unhealthy infactuation with
Daniel and had desired more more than a friendship with him he um lured Daniel to the department
that day on the pretense that he was going to uh have an orientation where the law firm that did
not exist with a mother that did not come there didn't isn't a lawyer and he said that when Daniel
arrived he uh told him that there was no orientation again that Daniel started to figure some things
out started to ask questions about all the lies that he'd been telling and wanted and got very
mad and wanted to leave josh then said that the prospect of Daniel leaving his life forever
and possibly telling everybody of all his lies was enough for him to want to not let Daniel go
and in a fit of rage he himself um attacked Daniel and that Daniel fought back and then he did admit
that he did make it look like he was the victim he stabbed himself he admitted all of those things
which i do think are all true what i don't agree with is i don't think Daniel ever questioned him
and i could be wrong i feel like especially because Daniel's wounds are on the back of his head
my personal feeling is is that Daniel didn't know what hit him literally
but other than that it was everything that we had already proved so you know it was very easy for him
for josh to be able to give the statement of facts using all of the stuff that he could not
disprove with his lawyer he basically told us nothing we didn't know and i imagine that there
is far more to that story and now what he eventually was charged with through this plea deal was
manslaughter which led to a much shorter time in prison and of course given the amount of time he
spent before his conviction getting credit for time served he was only i believe originally
scheduled to have i believe above two years in prison after his conviction but that and again
i'm getting to the what i see as another big injustice and and that's josh's early release
from prison and the way your family was was i guess uninformed of this can you just talk a bit
about when you first learned that he actually got out quite a bit earlier than anticipated
yeah absolutely his sentence after time served was for two years less a day which
afforded him the ability to be sentenced in a provincial prison rather than a federal
um i knew that josh was a model prisoner to so to speak he was uh he's very you know
manipulative and charming and can be on his best behavior and i had absolutely no doubt
in my mind that it would continue also not just his actual sentence but in the ruling
all of daniel's family and specifically a few other witnesses were given a no contact order
he is not to be anywhere near us you know no contact is to be made with us um and uh when he
was to be released we were to be notified that uh my son joel had a had an idea that maybe he had
been released already and i said well i i didn't think he had been you know i thought to myself
that's probably you know it's too early joel i expect he'd at least spend 18 months but to ease
your mind i will look into it and uh i contacted a few people to say you know how will i find out
about this how will they tell us we don't do they have our address what you know whatever
and in the process of looking into it i found that he'd already been released in october
and we were never notified which was especially devastating to our community to our to my daughter
she was terrified she's terrified um not that she needs to be but just the fact that this guy is out
and none of us knew was was a horrifying dress that don't know how that slipped through the cracks but
no matter how much i wish it didn't it did and uh yeah it's an uproar our community is up and on
the world should be up and on this man is out and he shouldn't be out anyway he shouldn't be out
anyway never mind on this later after 15 months and now josh's history before daniel before the
situation with daniel and daniel's murder uh that's been the subject of a few uh a few news
articles i came across at what point did you learn josh's history as like a quote-unquote con artist
it started right away actually uh we had people from prince george contacting us about things that
he'd done as a juvenile when he was 16 years old uh other people in crambrook were calling us and
telling us about what he'd done there with uh the the mp's there and then calgary and and you
know you just had to start googling his name which is something that has been kind of a mantra for
our family since you know google everyone you know because had daniel known his real name which he
didn't he told him that his name was josh buxton but if you are to google his name josh wabrito
up comes articles from 2008 2009 of all the things that he'd done in calgary in prince george
in crambrook in victoria every single one of these instances that he was involved in where
he was a liar a manipulator a cheat those were already in the news we just didn't know about them
but it was at the urging of other people to look into some of these things that we were able to find
who he was then daniel had no idea
i can't help but imagine like when when you think back to to daniel and who he is and you
you know in your life with with daniel it must be hard to not have you know the the darkness of
of his death kind of interfere with your with your memories of him so i just wonder when you think
of daniel does the way his life ended affect your your memories of the good times with him
or are you able to separate this for the first while i couldn't i definitely couldn't i um
i felt so cheated having already lost a child and having to bury my second one it was very difficult
for me to look past the unnecessary death and i know the difference between something that
can be blamed and something that can't and then when it came to daniel's death so tragically so
innocently on his part that i and i had someone to blame it was very difficult for me to separate
my love for daniel himself and my drive to find out what really happened and make sure somebody
paid for it we just loved daniel so much everybody did his father his stepmother and everybody who
loved daniel his friends family like we couldn't let go of all the good about daniel and and to be
honest when you think about his death everything that made him daniel is what got him killed his
love for people his loyalty his his willingness to believe everything you say because why would
anyone lie about something like that we celebrate him all the time you know and i think i do think
though i could have got a lot easier lost in the bad side of it if i didn't have these other two
children to raise that i wanted them to see that there can still be joy in your life there can
still be sunshine and we'd have our bad times i mean i've i've had to collect joel downtown
when after work one time when he just you know couldn't hold it in anymore he's been such a
little rock this poor 15 year old boy who suddenly became the man of the family and our our little
lani you know we sheltered her quite a bit uh when all the bad stuff was happening because it wasn't
fair that she was 12 years old and had to be thrust into the spotlight of of hate and vindictiveness
and and resentment and death something she couldn't understand at her age you know and it's been very
difficult but it's made us stronger and we're very very brave now throughout our talk you you
mentioned a lot you know the community and people of rattle stoke identifying you and
your family members and even in what i saw online like there's the facebook group of people sharing
their memories of of daniel can you can you talk a bit about the support you received
not so much from your family but from other members of your community or you know other people
oh i i would love to do that um rebel stoke is a sweet little town you know it's uh it's full
of extremely loving and caring people they were rebel stoke got behind us full force i i couldn't
have asked for a better situation in such terrible situation you know there was 1500 all you know
almost 1500 people at daniel's funeral people i didn't know he was just he touched so many lives
and they in return supported us he had such a huge and wonderful network of friends as do i
have so fortunate for that that we're able to hold our heads and hold our hands while we
wept openly in the grocery store sometimes you know uh daniel was loved by so many people and
everybody i like to think that everybody would have that you know that the love of a community
when you when something so tragic died but our our little rebel stoke had been through a lot
not starting with daniel's death but daniel's death being in the middle we lost
seven young people in the less than a year in a small community like this it was just very hurting
and none of them were the same situation as each other they were all very tragic and very very sad
but we knew grief in this little town of ours we knew how hard it was for families and you know
if there could ever be a story about a little town that pulls together for the hearts of mothers
and fathers of lost children it would be rebel stoke right there they just did every i couldn't
i can't thank this community enough my friends and daniel's friends and i always call myself the
luckiest unlucky girl in the world and that's who i am you know we had such a tragic situation but
had so many people pulling for us and working for us and it could have it really could have been a
very opposite of experience for us as negative as it was and as horrifying and as as painful as
experience with losing daniel and then the process afterwards i'm overwhelmed at how many people love
us and care for us and i just i couldn't be more thankful it's at this point that our discussion
ended well at least the part of the talk that i planned to be recorded but due to a stroke of
good luck i forgot to click the stop button and end the recording something i don't recall ever
having done before but in this case i'm so thankful that the tape kept rolling after the episode
credits an unplanned piece of our discussion will serve as the perfect setup for daniel's only
professional piece of recorded music a cover of the lennard skinnered song simple man so be sure
to stay at the very end of this episode and hear the gift that daniel was so excited about sharing
with the world his music but before we get to that i want to give a few thanks and wrap up this
episode first i want to offer most first i want to offer my most heartfelt condolences to the
friends family and loved ones of daniel levec despite having such a shocking and tragic end
daniel's story is about so much more than any monster could overshadow and daniel's fortunate
to have left behind many loved ones to maintain and celebrate his legacy one of the driving forces
of that of course was our guest stacey thurr his mother stacey you're quite simply amazing speaking
to you was not unlike receiving a master course in what it means to be a mother i'll be forever
in awe of your drive perseverance positivity and the love you display for your children
and with that i'll end this episode of nighttime a huge thanks to christie lee of the canadian true
crime podcast for collaborating with me on this series i encourage everyone who isn't already
listening to subscribe to her show she's the real deal and a big thanks to the canadian duo
voxsomnia for providing the theme for this series you can find voxsomnia through the link in the
episode notes and if you like music do yourself a favor and get somber with voxsomnia if any of
you listening want more from nighttime please check out the patreon group it's a dollar a month
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like to thank the current patrons of the show and welcome the newest members to the group
magan m mitzi munsey tj and jennifer g i sincerely appreciate the support you show nighttime
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so until next time take care of each other hug your loved ones tight and let me know if you see
anything weird the nighttime podcast is written hosted and produced by jordan bonaparte copyright
jordan bonaparte and i was going to include some some music i found a recording of daniel
that seems like it was professionally recorded of him singing a lennard skinner song yeah are you
aware of any other music he had recorded no that's the only one he recorded actually and he recorded
it on july 28 but shortly before his death and that's why there was only one it was just in a
little studio in in victoria that did this and it's quite a quite a remarkable story too so what
happened was he had this studio time paid for by josh actually and uh he went in and that was the
first song he was going to sing so what he did was he laid out the the guitar tracks acoustic guitar
and then the singing so he's two guitar tracks on it and then after his death a studio approached us
and asked if they could finish the song for him and so we had his friend jack playing the drum
his very good friend uh jamie fitchett playing the electric guitar some of the people that in
the studio playing a few other things and that's where that final recording came from but at his
funeral we played the acoustic version i had never heard it until he died because it just
been recorded on the 28th and they've worked to master it so that i could at least have the
acoustic version and we were able to play it at his funeral
cuz if beside me
my only son
listen closely
to what i say
and if you do this it'll help you some sunny day
so
boy take your time
don't live too fast your balls will come
they will pass
find a warmer yeah you'll find love
don't get some there is someone
be simple
kind of man
be something
love no understand
be simple
oh be a simple man
won't you do this for me so if you can