Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Judge delivers instructions to jury in Eaton Centre shooting trial

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Dec, 2014 11:52 AM

    TORONTO — The jury hearing the trial of a man accused in a deadly shooting at Toronto's Eaton Centre mall must decide if the mental disorder he was suffering was severe enough to render him incapable of appreciating his actions, a judge instructed Tuesday.

    Superior Court Justice Eugene Ewaschuk told jurors they have three verdicts available to them — guilty, not guilty or not criminally responsible.

    Christopher Husbands has admitted to fatally shooting Nixon Nirmalendran and Ahmed Hassan and wounding five others in June 2012, but has pleaded not guilty to multiple charges that include two counts of first-degree murder.

    His defence lawyers have argued Husbands should be found not criminally responsible by reason of a mental disorder.

    A psychiatrist called by the defence testified that Husbands suffered from post traumatic stress disorder and acted like a "robotic automaton" when he found himself confronted at the mall by two men who had viciously attacked him months earlier.

    The Crown, however, has argued that Husbands gunned down the two men in deliberate retaliation for a previous attack on him.

    In explaining the defence of not criminally responsible for jurors during the trial, Ewaschuk said the burden is on the accused in the case to prove insanity.

    "If you find that he was acting in a state of mentally disordered automatism at that time, your verdict should be not criminally responsible for all counts. That would be the end of your deliberations," Ewaschuk told the jury.

    If the jury rejects the defence of mentally disordered automatism, they must consider if Husbands is guilty of second-degree murder, manslaughter, or first-degree murder, Ewaschuk said.

    Jurors must weigh all the evidence before them, he said, including video surveillance footage from the crowded food court at the Eaton Centre, where Husbands opened fire.

    "The silent video tapes are the best witness in this case ... they have a perfect frozen memory," Ewaschuk said.

    The jury needs to consider, among other things, "truth versus fiction, reality versus fabrication" and "videotaped accuracy versus accused's credibility," Ewaschuk said.

    "It is for you to determine whether Christopher Husbands experienced true disassociation."

    The Crown has conceded that Husbands developed PTSD as a result of being beaten and stabbed 22 times in February 2012, but has argued the disorder was "far from disabling, Ewaschuk told the jury.

    Crown prosecutors have also argued that Husbands' own description of his PTSD was "greatly overdone," Ewaschuk noted.

    Meanwhile, Husbands's lawyers have argued that following the vicious February attack, Husbands changed, growing anxious and hyper vigilant.

    They have suggested that the sight of his assailants at the Eaton Centre on that day in June triggered an emotional reaction in Husbands, particularly after he said he heard one of them say "shoot him" and saw another man move his hand towards a pocket.

    In recapping the defence's key argument, Ewaschuk said Husbands' lawyers have suggested that "during the shooting the accused had no operating mind. He was a robotic automaton."

    Husbands has told his trial he "zoned out" during the shooting, seeing dark shadows as he fired 14 rounds and hearing nothing more than pins as panic erupted.

    It is important, however, that jurors determine whether Husbands' statements about what he heard and saw at the food court was true, Ewaschuk said.

    "Assuming that you find as fact that neither the statement was said nor the gesture heard, there is no evidential basis to find that he experienced a disassociative state," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hockey legend Pat Quinn remembered as a straight shooter with a heart of gold

    Hockey legend Pat Quinn remembered as a straight shooter with a heart of gold
    On the ice, behind the bench and behind his desk, Pat Quinn was an imposing figure.

    Hockey legend Pat Quinn remembered as a straight shooter with a heart of gold

    City, police sites in Ottawa hacked amid claims teen suspect is being framed

    City, police sites in Ottawa hacked amid claims teen suspect is being framed
    OTTAWA — A statement posted online says attacks on the Ottawa police website are in retaliation for what it claims are police efforts to frame an innocent teen.

    City, police sites in Ottawa hacked amid claims teen suspect is being framed

    NewLink Genetics gets some big league help on Ebola vaccine, enlists Merck

    NewLink Genetics gets some big league help on Ebola vaccine, enlists Merck
    TORONTO — The small American company developing a made-in-Canada Ebola vaccine has just received some major league help.

    NewLink Genetics gets some big league help on Ebola vaccine, enlists Merck

    Sex with buddy's mom not a motive for stabbing, Eaton Centre killer testifies

    Sex with buddy's mom not a motive for stabbing, Eaton Centre killer testifies
    TORONTO — The man who terrified a crowded mall food court with deadly gunfire in June 2012 says he had previously been attacked by six people.

    Sex with buddy's mom not a motive for stabbing, Eaton Centre killer testifies

    Modest amount of overvaluation in Canadian housing markets, CMHC says

    Modest amount of overvaluation in Canadian housing markets, CMHC says
    OTTAWA — The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said there is a modest amount of overvaluation in the country's housing markets, however other risk factors such was overheating, price acceleration, and overbuilding are not present.

    Modest amount of overvaluation in Canadian housing markets, CMHC says

    Houses should be checked for radon gas, can cause lung cancer, experts say

    Houses should be checked for radon gas, can cause lung cancer, experts say
    TORONTO — It's a naturally occurring radioactive gas that can seep through cracks and crevices in houses and other enclosed spaces — and can cause lung cancer. Yet many Canadians aren't even aware of its existence or the health risk the substance can pose.

    Houses should be checked for radon gas, can cause lung cancer, experts say