Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Board OKs Plan For Man Who Beheaded Bus Passenger To Eventually Live On His Own

The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2016 11:38 AM
  • Board OKs Plan For Man Who Beheaded Bus Passenger To Eventually Live On His Own
WINNIPEG — A man who beheaded a fellow passenger on a Greyhound bus in Manitoba has won the right to eventually live on his own.
 
A Criminal Code Review Board has approved a plan that would allow Vince Li to at some point move out of the group home where he now lives.
 
Li — who has changed his name to Will Baker — killed Tim McLean during a bus trip along the TransCanada Highway near Portage la Prairie in July 2008.
 
He was found to be not criminally responsible for the murder due to a mental illness — schizophrenia.
 
The board reviews Baker's file annually and has ruled that he could move out on his own following an updated assessment report that would include conditions for living in the community.
 
Baker was originally kept in a secure wing at the Selkirk Mental Health Centre, but the board has granted him increasing freedoms almost every year.
 
The request for more freedom came from Baker's medical team, which said he has been a model patient and understands the need to continue to take anti-psychotic medication.
 
Even living on his own, he would be subject to several conditions that would include daily monitoring, regular check-ins with mental health professionals and random drug tests.
 
Baker sat next to the 22-year-old McLean on the bus after the young man smiled at him and asked how he was doing.
 
Baker said he heard the voice of God telling him to kill the young carnival worker or "die immediately.'' Baker repeatedly stabbed McLean who unsuccessfully fought for his life.
 
As passengers fled the bus, Baker continued stabbing and mutilating the body before he was arrested.
 
He won the right to leave the hospital and live in a group home last year.
 
Supporters say Baker and other people deemed not criminally responsible for their actions deserve the right to rehabilitation and freedom. But opponents, including some politicians and McLean's mother, have opposed the board granting Baker increasing freedom.
 
"The Crown has the ability to view Will Baker ... as a designated high-risk not criminally responsible person, but they have chosen not to," Conservative MP James Bezan wrote in a statement this week.
 
"They have blatantly ignored the rights of the victim’s family, and compromised the public safety of our community in (their) decision."

MORE National ARTICLES

Status Quo Not An Option, Atlantic Premiers Say As They Ask Ottawa For Economic Help

New Brunswick Premier Brian Gallant says the status quo is not an option as Atlantic Canada faces potentially crippling economic challenges.

Status Quo Not An Option, Atlantic Premiers Say As They Ask Ottawa For Economic Help

Tom Mulcair Shoulders Blame For Campaign In Letter To New Democrat Supporters

The note follows the release of an interim report from a post-mortem working group which says the campaign failed to resound with voters.

Tom Mulcair Shoulders Blame For Campaign In Letter To New Democrat Supporters

Whistler Blackcomb Records 1.1 Million Skier Visits So Far, A Record High

Whistler Blackcomb Records 1.1 Million Skier Visits So Far, A Record High
In the three months that ended Dec. 31, it recorded 502,000 skier visits - up 23.3 per cent from the comparable quarter of 2014

Whistler Blackcomb Records 1.1 Million Skier Visits So Far, A Record High

Family Of Man Killed In Toronto's Muzik Nightclub Shooting Files $2.5m Lawsuit

Family Of Man Killed In Toronto's Muzik Nightclub Shooting Files $2.5m Lawsuit
Hibbert and 26-year-old Ariela Navarro-Fenoy died in the early hours of Aug. 4, 2015, after what police described as a "brazen" shooting that took place at a party being hosted by Canadian rapper Drake.

Family Of Man Killed In Toronto's Muzik Nightclub Shooting Files $2.5m Lawsuit

Jim Carr Promises First Nations Collaboration On Energy Development

Jim Carr Promises First Nations Collaboration On Energy Development
Canada's natural resources minister says the Liberal government wants to collaborate with indigenous communities to develop natural resources based on a low-carbon, sustainable energy economy.

Jim Carr Promises First Nations Collaboration On Energy Development

Government Will Consider Google Computer To Be Car's Driver

Government Will Consider Google Computer To Be Car's Driver
Computers that control cars of the future can be considered drivers just like humans, the federal government's highway safety agency has found

Government Will Consider Google Computer To Be Car's Driver