Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. shooter who opened fire in small town found not criminally responsible

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Dec, 2014 05:45 PM

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A man who opened fire in a small town in B.C.'s Interior, shooting a man in the face won't be held criminally responsible.

    Eric Nelson of Spences Bridge, B.C., was charged with a dozen counts including attempted murder after a series of violent incidents in May 2013.

    Court heard that Nelson opened fire on a home in Spences Bridge, hitting a man in the face.

    A couple days later he got into an argument with another motorist on a rural highway and threw a boulder at the vehicle, which had two people inside.

    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Joel Groves said he was satisfied Nelson was not criminally responsible because of a mental disorder.

    His defence lawyer said Nelson was in the throes of a manic episode and was diagnosed with bipolar disorder after the incidents.

    "He was under a variety of grandiose and, at times, paranoid delusions," said Micah Rankin, who described his client as a "back-to-the-earth hippie type."

    After shooting up the Spences Bridge home on May 15, 2013, Nelson met with his son in nearby Lytton the next day and boasted about having shot a pedophile in the face, court heard.

    On May 17, 2013, Nelson threw a boulder at a vehicle and then asked the driver to follow him home, which he did. Once there, Nelson demanded the driver’s shotgun, potatoes and money.

    He then asked to be driven to a friend's house, where he told his friend he was in a manic state.

    Nelson, 53, was arrested the following day. In custody, he began rambling to police about politics and a conspiracy involving the NDP. He was released after meeting with a doctor.

    He was arrested again six days later after stealing a truck and driving it into the bush.

    Four of the charges Nelson was facing — assault, assault with a weapon, aggravated assault and possession of stolen property — were stayed before he was found not criminally responsible.

    Nelson's file will now be handed over to the B.C. Review Board, which will monitor his mental state on a regular basis.

    Nelson is not in custody. (Kamloops This Week)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    First Nations angry: NAFTA environmental body won't probe Canadian salmon farms

    First Nations angry: NAFTA environmental body won't probe Canadian salmon farms
    MONTREAL — Conservationists and First Nations are angry that NAFTA's environmental watchdog has rejected a recommendation to investigate Canada's handling of salmon farms along the British Columbia coast.

    First Nations angry: NAFTA environmental body won't probe Canadian salmon farms

    Families Of Six Murdered In Surrey Highrise Speak Of Impact Of Deaths

    Families Of Six Murdered In Surrey Highrise Speak Of Impact Of Deaths
    VANCOUVER — The mother of a young man who was murdered sobbed as she described being tortured by guilt for asking her son to stay home and meet a fireplace repairman the day both men were shot dead.

    Families Of Six Murdered In Surrey Highrise Speak Of Impact Of Deaths

    Vancouver Airport Volunteer Helps Travellers Get To Their Destination

    Vancouver Airport Volunteer Helps Travellers Get To Their Destination
    VANCOUVER — As a longtime "Green Coat" volunteer at Vancouver International Airport, Doug Franklin has helped countless travellers find their way around the terminal.

    Vancouver Airport Volunteer Helps Travellers Get To Their Destination

    Dallas Stars' Owner Fined $140,000 For Damaging Fish Habitat During Renovations In Kamloops

    Dallas Stars' Owner Fined $140,000 For Damaging Fish Habitat During Renovations In Kamloops
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The owner of two hockey teams including the Dallas Stars has been fined $140,000 for polluting a lake during renovations of his vacation property in Kamloops, B.C.

    Dallas Stars' Owner Fined $140,000 For Damaging Fish Habitat During Renovations In Kamloops

    Six-term New Democrat MP Libby Davies won't run again in 2015

    Six-term New Democrat MP Libby Davies won't run again in 2015
    VANCOUVER — Federal New Democrat Libby Davies says being elected to her Vancouver riding six times is enough and that she won't be running in next year's election.

    Six-term New Democrat MP Libby Davies won't run again in 2015

    Canada court overturns Indian origin man's sexual assault conviction

    Canada court overturns Indian origin man's sexual assault conviction
    The sexual assault conviction had led to the imprisonment and deportation of Gurdev Singh Dhillon, which the Crown later admitted was a "miscarriage of justice"....

    Canada court overturns Indian origin man's sexual assault conviction