Prosecutors question credibility of Kalen Schlatter at his murder trial
TORONTO — A Toronto man accused of killing a young woman denied Tuesday that he led her to a secluded area, forced himself on her and left her dead body crumpled at the bottom of a stairwell.
Prosecutors challenged Kalen Schlatter’s account of what happened the night Tess Richey disappeared, suggesting it was him, not her, who initiated and orchestrated their encounter.
Crown attorney Bev Richards argued Schlatter was set on having sex that night and had unsuccessfully tried to charm several other women by the time he crossed paths with the 22-year-old outside a downtown Toronto nightclub.
She suggested Schlatter did not want Richey to go home and followed the young woman after her friend left, even waving away a taxi that she hailed, because he liked a challenge and wanted to “score” — a narrative Schlatter rejected.