B.C. murder suspect says he attempted suicide after victim ‘slipped’ down embankment
The man accused of murdering Tatjana Stefanski in British Columbia more than two years ago testified Wednesday that he tried to kill himself twice in the hours after her death, by drowning in a lake and by stabbing himself with a kitchen knife found at an empty cabin.
But Vitali Stefanski denied harming his ex-wife or deliberately dumping her remains, saying instead that she stabbed herself in his car and her body later “slipped” from his grasp, the day before it was found off a forestry road outside Lumby in B.C.’s southern Interior, with seven stab wounds to the chest and other injuries.
Stefanski, who has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder at his B.C. Supreme Court jury trial in Kamloops, testified that he “did everything” he could to get her medical help after driving away with her from her home on April 13, 2024.
He described climbing over her through the passenger side of his car, discovering she had been stabbed with his own fishing knife, then heading in a different direction from the nearest hospital because of the way his car was parked.


