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Court upholds home invasion conviction

Kenneth William Chudley is serving a 10-year prison term after being convicted of a range of offences stemming from a 2010 home invasion.

The Court of Appeal has upheld the conviction of a man arrested in a violent 2010 home invasion in Mission that saw the owner of the house shot three times in both legs and struck with a bat.

Kenneth William Chudley was sentenced to 10 years in prison after being convicted in 2011 of using a firearm in a robbery, assault with a bat, break and enter, and unlawful confinement.

On Dec. 14, 2010, five men stormed a rural Mission home. The owner of the house tried to fend them off with a spear, but was shot, and hit with a bat. The assailants duct-taped his hands, feet and mouth and demanded the location of money and a safe. They left with guns, Christmas presents, pot plants and $2,300.

Upon his conviction in December 2011, Chudley fled the Abbotsford courthouse. He was arrested later that day. He would later plead guilty to escape from lawful custody.

On appeal, Chudley’s lawyer argued the trial judge relied too much on fingerprint evidence. Chudley was not identified by the homeowner who had been attacked, but his fingerprint had been found on a rolled-up wad of duct tape. Police ran the print through a database, which suggested Chudley was a possible match. An officer then verified the match.

The three appeal court justices upheld the conviction last month. Justice J.A. Newberry wrote that the trial judge made no errors, and that the appeal court cannot re-try the case.

-with files from Vikki Hopes