小蓝视频

Skip to content

Man convicted in 2014 Kelowna killing back behind bars

Earlier this week, Steven Pirko was charged with carrying concealed brass knuckles and carrying a knife outside of his home, in breach of his probation conditions.
359466679_6468897456520238_7005521656914069353_n_p3733924
Steven Pirko.

Less than three months after he was sentenced to time served for a 2014 killing in Rutland and released from custody, Steven Pirko is back behind bars.

Pirko was  of the second-degree murder of 32-year-old Chris Ausman, and was  with no chance of parole until mid-2028. But Pirko  the conviction and instead  to manslaughter.

This past July, he was  and was released from custody with three years of probation.

Earlier this week, Pirko was charged with carrying concealed brass knuckles and carrying a knife outside of his home, in breach of his probation conditions.

The charges stem from an incident on Oct. 21, 2021. An additional charge of failing to comply with a probation order is alleged to have occurred between Sept. 22 and Oct. 13.

The new charges were laid on Oct. 22 and after Judge Andrew Tam ordered his detention Monday, Pirko remains in custody. He’s scheduled to return to court on Nov. 7.

Pirko had been out of jail since July 6, when he was sentenced to time served on the previous manslaughter conviction. Prior to that he had been in custody since his previous arrest in 2016.

His overturned second-degree murder conviction, and then manslaughter conviction, stemmed from an incident in the early morning hours of Jan. 25, 2014 on Highway 33 in Kelowna’s Rutland area.

Pirko and his friend Elrich Dyck were walking south on the highway near Rutland Road when they came upon Ausman walking north, on the other side of the road. Ausman had recently left a poker game with friends. All three men were intoxicated.

Pirko and Dyck had never met Ausman before, but words were exchanged, the pair ran over to Ausman and a fight between Ausman and Dyck broke out.

As Ausman got the upper hand in the fist fight, Pirko came up from behind Ausman and  in the head with a hammer he had been carrying.

The blows proved fatal.

Pirko and Dyck left Ausman’s lifeless body on the sidewalk and fled the area. An RCMP officer came upon Ausman’s body later that morning.

Pirko was  in the killing in November 2016 . Following a  in the spring of 2019 a jury convicted Pirko of the murder and he was sentenced to a life sentence, with no chance of parole for 11 years.

But four years later, the 小蓝视频 Court of Appeal overturned the conviction, ruling that Justice Allan Betton’s instructions to the jury were “so confusing as to amount to error in law.”

Rather than proceed with another trial, the Crown accepted a plea to manslaughter, and Pirko was sentenced to eight years in jail on July 6, 2023. But with enhanced time served credit of nine years, he was released from custody with an additional three years of probation.

“Not a day goes by that I don’t regret what I did," Pirko told Ausman's family during his sentencing. "I don’t expect you to forgive me, but I hope one day you will understand my side. I will continue to try to better myself."

Now, Pirko is back behind bars after allegedly breaching his probation conditions by carrying the brass knuckles and knife.

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks