Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Illness defence relies on accused's word: Crown

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2021 08:51 PM
  • Illness defence relies on accused's word: Crown

A Crown prosecutor says there's no reliable evidence to support an argument that a man who stabbed two high school girls in Abbotsford, B.C., was having a psychotic break and didn't realize they were human.

Gabriel Klein was convicted of second-degree murder and aggravated assault in March for the 2016 attack that killed 13-year-old Letisha Reimer and injured her friend.

Closing arguments are underway in a hearing in which Klein's lawyer has argued his client should not be held criminally responsible for the crimes because he suffered a mental disorder that led him to believe he was stabbing monsters.

However, Crown prosecutor Rob Macgowan says the judge hearing the case would have to take Klein's word for it in order to rule in his favour.

Macgowan says any evidence that Klein did not realize he was stabbing two screaming girls at the high school is based only on what Klein has said.

He says it doesn't matter if some experts have said they accept Klein's claim about what he saw, because those beliefs are still based primarily on what Klein told them.

Macgowan says the judge would have to conclude Klein had a psychotic illness at the time of the stabbings and then would have to accept Klein's own evidence of his perceptions that day.

"Because if you don't accept Klein's word for it, we submit that all you would be left with is the same body of evidence upon which he was found guilty of murder and aggravated assault."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario to end streaming in Grade 9, early years suspensions

Ontario to end streaming in Grade 9, early years suspensions
Ontario will soon join the rest of Canada by doing away with an educational practice that perpetuates racism throughout the system, the provincial government said Monday as it announced the looming end to streaming in high schools.

Ontario to end streaming in Grade 9, early years suspensions

Pandemic slows RCMP secrets case

Pandemic slows RCMP secrets case
A federal prosecutor says the disclosure of evidence to defence lawyers has "slowed significantly" in the case of Cameron Jay Ortis, an RCMP member charged with revealing secrets.

Pandemic slows RCMP secrets case

OD deaths up among B.C. First Nations

OD deaths up among B.C. First Nations
The First Nations Health Authority says 89 members of its community fatally overdosed from illicit drugs across British Columbia between January and May, an increase of 93 per cent compared with the same period last year.

OD deaths up among B.C. First Nations

Clearview AI bows out of Canada: watchdog

Clearview AI bows out of Canada: watchdog
The federal privacy commissioner says U.S. firm Clearview AI will stop offering its facial-recognition services in Canada in response to an investigation by the commissioner and three provincial counterparts.

Clearview AI bows out of Canada: watchdog

Child Sexual Assault Investigation, Patgunalingam Rasalingam, 48, faces multiple charges

Child Sexual Assault Investigation,  Patgunalingam Rasalingam, 48, faces multiple charges
The Toronto Police Service would like to make the public aware of an arrest madr in a child sexual assault investigation.

Child Sexual Assault Investigation, Patgunalingam Rasalingam, 48, faces multiple charges

Vancouver Police arrest man in Vancouver's fifth murder

Vancouver Police arrest man in Vancouver's fifth murder
Vancouver Police have arrested a 52-year-old Vancouver man following a stabbing in the Downtown Eastside on Canada Day.

Vancouver Police arrest man in Vancouver's fifth murder