Thursday, May 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Premier Doug Ford Wants Answers On Mental Health Detainee Who Fled, Calls Man A ‘Nutcase’

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jul, 2019 08:21 PM

    TORONTO - Ontario's premier vowed Thursday to get to the bottom of how a patient detained at a mental health hospital for killing his roommate managed to flee, calling the man a "nutcase."

     

    Zhebin Cong, who was found not criminally responsible for the death of his roommate, had been on an unaccompanied trip into the community from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health on July 3 when he failed to return, the hospital said.

     

    CAMH said it reported the 47-year-old's disappearance later that day to police, who issued a notice asking for the public's help in finding the man nearly two weeks later.

     

    Toronto police have said CAMH told them Cong presented a low risk to public safety, but the Ontario Review Board, which evaluates the status and assesses the risk of anyone found not criminally responsible, found in its most recent decision in April that he continued to pose a significant threat to public safety.

     

    Premier Doug Ford phoned in to a talk radio show Thursday on NewsTalk1010 to say he's "disgusted."

     

    "What is the family thinking of the poor victim that got chopped up with a meat cleaver by this nutcase and then they let him loose out on the streets," he said.

     

    Ford said he would be speaking Thursday with Toronto police, the review board and CAMH.

     

    "Someone's going to be answering because if you're calling this low risk, what is high risk?" he said. "These crazy, crazy people that want to go around chopping people up, they're out on the streets."

     

    CAMH said it was doing an internal review and is reassessing all existing passes and privileges for patients, especially those who have unsupervised access to the community.

     

    Police say Cong has fled the country and they are working with international law enforcement agencies to track him down.

     

    Records from the Ontario Review Board show Cong killed his roommate with a meat cleaver in 2014 and was found non-criminally responsible on a charge of second-degree murder as a result of his mental illness.

     

    Cong was an in-patient at the secured forensic unit of CAMH and deals with schizophrenia, the records show.

     

    He was granted a pass to the community by medical officials that allowed him to leave the hospital for a fixed purpose on the condition that he return at a fixed time.

     

    In its April decision, the board found Cong's condition had slightly improved with ongoing anti-psychotic medication, but that he did not fully understand his mental illness, its symptoms and his risk of relapse and violence.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C.'s Haig-Brown Conservation Award Goes To Calgary Resident Eric Hobson

    A Calgary man is the recipient of a high-profile conservation award in British Columbia.

    B.C.'s Haig-Brown Conservation Award Goes To Calgary Resident Eric Hobson

    U.S. Residents Visiting B.C. Help Save Drowning Man In North Vancouver

    U.S. Residents Visiting B.C. Help Save Drowning Man In North Vancouver
    VANCOUVER - Several Good Samaritans from the United States have saved a man from drowning in British Columbia.    

    U.S. Residents Visiting B.C. Help Save Drowning Man In North Vancouver

    Airline Confirms Three Dead After Float Plane Crashes In Labrador Lake

    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - A search is underway for four people missing after a float plane crashed into a Labrador lake on Monday, killing three of the occupants.    

    Airline Confirms Three Dead After Float Plane Crashes In Labrador Lake

    Cuts To Legal Aid Ontario Will Cause Hearing Delays: Immigration Refugee Board

    Cuts To Legal Aid Ontario Will Cause Hearing Delays: Immigration Refugee Board
    The tribunal that adjudicates asylum claims in Canada says it expects cuts to legal-aid funding imposed by the Doug Ford government in Ontario will lead to delays and other disruptions of refugee hearings.

    Cuts To Legal Aid Ontario Will Cause Hearing Delays: Immigration Refugee Board

    Ride-Hailing To Come To B.C., But Will Uber, Lyft?

    VICTORIA - The British Columbia government's firm position on tougher driver's licence requirements for ride-hailing is a move in the right direction, given the experiences from other jurisdictions, a transportation expert says.    

    Ride-Hailing To Come To B.C., But Will Uber, Lyft?

    Jagmeet Singh Sees Quebec As 'Fertile Ground' For NDP As He Hits Province For Tour

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the province of Quebec offers the New Democrats "fertile ground" despite private hand-wringing about its current state ahead of the election.

    Jagmeet Singh Sees Quebec As 'Fertile Ground' For NDP As He Hits Province For Tour