The Verdict That Shocked Ontario
In a Milton, Ontario courtroom on May 5, 2026, Justice Clayton Conlan delivered a stunning guilty verdict against Becky Hamber and Brandy Cooney, a Burlington couple who had been prospective adoptive parents to two Indigenous brothers. The judge found the pair guilty of first-degree murder in the death of 12-year-old L.L. and multiple counts related to the torture of his younger brother J.L., including confinement, assault with a weapon, and failing to provide the necessaries of life. Gasps echoed through the room as Conlan outlined his nearly 300-page written decision, rejecting the women's testimonies outright and crediting harrowing evidence from texts, medical experts, and J.L. himself. This case, spanning years of alleged abuse hidden behind the facade of fostering, has ignited national outrage and calls for child welfare reform.
The trial, which began in mid-September 2025 and featured closing arguments in late March 2026, involved 48 witnesses, 209 exhibits, and thousands of recovered deleted messages. It laid bare a story of isolation, starvation, and dehumanization in what should have been a safe home. L.L. was discovered unresponsive and emaciated in the basement on December 21, 2022, his body described as 'razor-thin' and cachectic, weighing far less than expected for his age. First responders struggled to identify him as a 12-year-old due to his severe malnourishment.
Who Were Becky Hamber and Brandy Cooney?
Becky Hamber, 46, and Brandy Cooney, 44, presented themselves as dedicated foster parents eager to adopt. Living in Burlington, a suburban city in Halton Region west of Toronto, the married couple took in the brothers around 2017 after they were placed by the Ottawa Children's Aid Society (CAS). Initially, reports suggested a positive transition from previous foster care in Ottawa, but cracks soon appeared. Hamber and Cooney worked with attachment therapists and claimed cultural ties to Indigenous heritage, though Hamber later contradicted this in a 2023 video, stating there was no proof of the boys' Indigeneity—a point Conlan dismissed as 'nonsensical.'
The couple home-schooled the boys, limiting external contact, and installed security cameras to monitor them constantly. They described using unconventional methods like baby bottles for feeding and wetsuits for restraint, which they insisted were therapeutic. However, private texts revealed a darker reality: terms like 'moron,' 'douche,' 'fuck face,' and 'it' were routinely used, signaling deep resentment. Conlan ruled these were not mere 'frustration language' but evidence of hatred.
The Boys' Path into Foster Care
L.L. and J.L., Indigenous brothers from the Ottawa area, entered care as wards of the Ottawa CAS, with Halton CAS overseeing their daily placement in Burlington. Their birth mother, speaking publicly for the first time ahead of the verdict, described them as 'amazing, funny, and intelligent' with 'bigger than life personalities.' She cherished memories of family life before placement and now reunites with J.L., 14, emphasizing healing beyond court. The boys had siblings and a supportive extended family and Indigenous community, bonds severed by the system.
Placement with Hamber and Cooney was intended as a permanency plan, but adoption stalled for five years amid mounting concerns. Early therapist notes from 2018 highlighted challenging behaviors, with the women expressing fatigue and lack of gratitude from the boys. The home felt like 'walking on eggshells,' and the children appeared scared—a red flag ignored as the system pressured for successful adoptions.
Escalating Signs of Abuse and Neglect
By 2022, alarms rang louder. A teacher contacted Halton CAS four times, 'terrified' for L.L., fearing self-harm, but was told it was 'too political' needing more reports. A September 22, 2022, virtual visit noted L.L.'s sunken cheeks, pale skin, and dark circles—eight days before a doctor called him a 'ticking time bomb' who might have survived hospitalization. Helmets worn indoors, bed-wetting, sparse basement quarters, and zip-tie restraints were documented but dismissed.
An April 2022 CAS supervisors' memo flagged 'reactive and extreme' parenting, home-schooling isolation, and suggested permanent wardship, yet no intervention followed. Mandatory visits were missed; one worker's promotion left a three-month oversight gap before L.L.'s death. Post-mortem confirmed malnutrition as key, possibly with hypothermia from being wet and confined.
The Final Hours: A Boy's Desperate Plea
On December 21, 2022, L.L. banged on the basement door, vomiting in pain and begging for help, according to trial evidence. Hamber and Cooney delayed calling 911, later claiming an eating disorder or electrolyte imbalance. J.L. testified to years of shared torment: locked rooms, withheld food, assaults. After L.L.'s death, Cooney searched 'murder,' 'manslaughter,' and camera footage erasure—actions Conlan deemed incompatible with innocent grief.
- Late November 2022: L.L. seen by doctor, severely underweight.
- December 21 morning: Unresponsive discovery.
- Immediate aftermath: J.L. apprehended by CAS, returned to birth mother.
Damning Evidence from Texts and Surveillance
Recovered texts painted a vile picture: 'shiver shiver dumb f--k' days before death, jailer references, and dehumanizing labels habitual among the couple and Cooney's father. Security footage showed constant monitoring; audio captured sobs like 'It's not fair. I'm hungry.' Medical experts ruled out disorders, affirming starvation and neglect. J.L.'s credible testimony corroborated all, speaking for both brothers.
Conlan: 'I do not believe the evidence of the accused... replete with contradictions.' He inferred intent from patterns, rejecting defences of therapeutic intent.
The Trial: Crown's Case vs. Defence Claims
Crown attorneys Monica Mackenzie and Kelli Frew argued years of torture—starvation, isolation, restraints—foreseeably killed L.L. Defence lawyers Kim Edward and Monte MacGregor blamed CAS, doctors, and rare disorders, insisting no intent to harm and 911 call proved care. Both women testified, Hamber sobbing she 'never wanted him to die.' Conlan sided fully with the Crown.
Justice Conlan's Unyielding Reasoning
In his decision, Conlan dissected inconsistencies: Indigenous claims flipped, texts minimized, searches suspicious. 'They loathed them. They deeply resented them,' he wrote of the boys. J.L. believed; accused discredited. All charges met: murder via confinement/failure to feed; torture via prolonged suffering for J.L.
Heartfelt Reactions from Family and Community
Heather Walsh, prior foster mom, teared up outside court: 'L.L. was a freedom fighter... justice for him and J.L.' Birth mother: 'Healing not over... prevent another systemic failure.' Advocates like Irwin Elman decried 'deep systemic challenges.'

CAS Catastrophe: Fired Workers and Systemic Bias
Halton CAS fired three workers post-investigation; one sued, claiming scapegoating. Experts like Kiaras Gharabaghi: 'Siloed systems... self-preservation over well-being.' Confirmation bias favored placement; underfunding persists. New 2025 law mandates 30-day adoptive checks, but critics demand more. Toronto Star on CAS failures.
Indigenous Overrepresentation: A National Crisis
Indigenous kids comprise 54% of Canadian foster care despite 7.7% population share. Ontario mirrors this; cases like this echo residential schools. Cindy Blackstock urges TRC implementation, family preservation. $8.5B 2026 Ontario First Nations deal approved by tribunal aims reform. CBC on welfare failures. Stats: 10,000 Ontario kids in care monthly; 363 adoptions in 2024.
Photo by Lucas George Wendt on Unsplash
Path Forward: Sentencing and Urgent Reforms
Sentencing set for May 15, 2026; first-degree murder mandates life, parole 25 years. Birth family sues CAS/doctors for $4M. Advocates demand national death registry, mandatory inquests, cross-sector reviews. This tragedy underscores: child protection demands overhaul for high-needs kids, especially Indigenous. Ontario's future hinges on action now.

As Canada grapples, L.L.'s story compels change—ensuring no basement hides another horror.
Full CBC verdict coverage.






