Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Killer to argue he's not criminally responsible

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Sep, 2020 10:53 PM
  • Killer to argue he's not criminally responsible

A lawyer for a man who fatally stabbed a high school student four years ago in Abbotsford, B.C., says he will argue in court that the man is not criminally responsible because of a mental disorder.

The announcement comes just a week before Gabriel Klein was to be sentenced for the second-degree murder of 13-year-old Letisha Reimer and aggravated assault of her friend.

Defence lawyer Martin Peters says his client has changed his mind and wants to exercise his right to raise the issue of a possible mental disorder after he was found guilty in March.

Peters says he was concerned about completing the case before addressing the issue of whether there should be an exception to criminal liability because of his client's mental illness.

He says Crown lawyers told a B.C. Supreme Court judge they were blindsided by the news during a recent meeting and the sentencing hearing set for Sept. 23 has been cancelled.

Instead, Peters says they will meet Sept. 24 to fix a date to argue the claim of not criminally responsible.

Peters says a defendant has the right to raise issues of mental illness either during the trial or after a verdict.

"It's very similar to entrapment. You can raise mental disorder or entrapment as part of the trial ... or you can wait and see if the Crown can actually prove their case, which (it) did, and then raise it post-verdict."

During the trial, Peters had argued that Klein did not mean to kill Reimer and urged Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes to find him guilty of manslaughter. Peters argued there was reasonable doubt related to the murder charge because his client exhibited odd behaviour and mental distress beforehand, suggesting he did not intentionally plan to kill anyone.

Crown attorney Rob Macgowan said in his closing argument that Klein faked symptoms of a mental disorder after his arrest in order to be found not criminally responsible of the crimes and even told a psychiatrist who assessed him at a hospital that his lawyer would use that as a defence.

Holmes said there was no evidence that the strange behaviour and sounds exhibited by Klein in the hours before the attack indicated a mental condition, but that doesn't mean they were "deliberately feigned."

MORE National ARTICLES

NDP Calls For Moratorium On Clearview AI Facial Recognition Software

NDP Calls For Moratorium On Clearview AI Facial Recognition Software
OTTAWA - NDP ethics critic Charlie Angus wants the Liberal government to issue a moratorium on the use of controversial facial-recognition software by the RCMP.

NDP Calls For Moratorium On Clearview AI Facial Recognition Software

Liberals Poised To Legislate A Ban On Conversion Therapy

OTTAWA - The Liberal government is poised to introduce a bill that would outlaw therapy intended to alter a person's sexual orientation or gender identity.

Liberals Poised To Legislate A Ban On Conversion Therapy

'Wonderful Little Bird': Alberta Man Retrieves His First Plane 48 Years Later

Growing up on a farm near Cremona, Alta., about 80 kilometres northwest of Calgary, he was obsessed with airplanes as a kid and became a fully licensed pilot by the time he was 17.

'Wonderful Little Bird': Alberta Man Retrieves His First Plane 48 Years Later

Burnaby RCMP Warn Of An Increase Of Break-ins At Lower-Level Apartment Units

The Burnaby RCMP have noticed an increase in residential break and enters occurring in lower-level apartment units.    

Burnaby RCMP Warn Of An Increase Of Break-ins At Lower-Level Apartment Units

North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price

North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price
North American stock markets suffered their worst meltdown since the global financial crisis as a collapse in oil prices triggered a plunge in the energy sector and prompted the loonie to take a dive.    

North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price

Dr. Bonnie Henry, Virus Hunter, Healer, Resolves To 'Break' COVID-19

At the end of a stark news conference during which Dr. Bonnie Henry wiped tears as she broke the news confirming diagnosis of two cases of COVID-19 transmission at a North Vancouver long-term care home, she worried she was about to frighten her parents.

Dr. Bonnie Henry, Virus Hunter, Healer, Resolves To 'Break' COVID-19