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B.C. man found guilty of 1st-degree murder in Yukon appeals conviction

A British Columbia man is appealing his first-degree murder conviction for a 2017 shooting in Yukon.

Edward Penner found guilty in 2017 shooting of Adam Cormack, given life sentence

Police block off access to the site where Adam Cormack's body was found in 2017. Edward Penner was found guilty of murder in the case and given a life sentence. He is appealing his conviction. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

A British Columbia man is appealing his first-degree murder conviction for a 2017 shooting in Yukon.

A Yukon Supreme Court jury found 22-year-old Quesnel, B.C., resident Edward Penner guilty of an attack on Adam Cormack.

The 25-year-old victim from Whitehorse was shot to death in a gravel pit near that city in what the jury was told was a dispute over a gun.

Penner was convicted following a trial that ended in September and sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole for 25 years.

Earlier this month, papers arguing grounds for the conviction were unreasonable were filed to the Yukon Court of Appeal.

A date for the appeal has not been set.