Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Board Finds Gabriel Klein Fit To Stand Trial In 13-Yr-Old Girl's Death At Abbotsford High School

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2019 03:34 AM

    PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. — The British Columbia Review Board has found a man mentally fit to stand trial in the death of a 13-year-old girl at a high school in Abbotsford more than two years ago.


    The board heard Tuesday that Gabriel Klein's mental health has improved during his stay at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital in Coquitlam.


    A B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled last year that Klein was unfit to stand trial on charges of second-degree murder and aggravated assault.


    A second girl was injured at Abbotsford Secondary School in November 2016.


    Klein, who's in his early 20s, has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and previously told the board he was plagued by voices every hour of the day.


    Klein's lawyer, Martin Peters, says his client no longer constantly hears voices, which will be critical to listening to evidence and giving instructions during a trial.


    "He is now able to, for most of each day, exist without voices screaming in his head and telling him, directing him to do things, and interrupting his train of thought," he said outside the hearing.


    Dave Teixeira, a spokesman for the dead girl's family, says he wasn't surprised how quickly Klein's diagnosis has changed.


    "I think anyone who suffers from mental illness and gets the help that they need are going to show improvements. He certainly was far more articulate today than we have heard in his trials or in previous hearings."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hydro To Be Restored To Vancouver Island Customers By Thursday Night: Bc Hydro

    Hydro To Be Restored To Vancouver Island Customers By Thursday Night: Bc Hydro
    BC Hydro says about 4,000 customers still have no lights, down from roughly 7,000 customers early on Boxing Day.

    Hydro To Be Restored To Vancouver Island Customers By Thursday Night: Bc Hydro

    Police Chief Calls 2018, With 96 Homicides So Far, A 'Unique' Year For Toronto

    Mark Saunders said officers had recovered 514 handguns so far in 2018 — or 222 more than in 2017 — and the number of homicides caused by shootings had gone up by nearly 30 per cent.

    Police Chief Calls 2018, With 96 Homicides So Far, A 'Unique' Year For Toronto

    How Long Can It Go? Resilient Economy Enters 2019 With Signs Of Weakness

    How Long Can It Go? Resilient Economy Enters 2019 With Signs Of Weakness
    Through much of 2018, Canada's unemployment rate hovered near a 40-year low and job-creation remained strong as the evidence pointed to an economy going at close to full tilt.

    How Long Can It Go? Resilient Economy Enters 2019 With Signs Of Weakness

    Can The Liberals Take All The Credit For Economic And Jobs Gains?

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau decided the end of 2018 was a good time to look back at the economic and jobs gains since he took office. "We took" low growth and sent it higher, he said. 

    Can The Liberals Take All The Credit For Economic And Jobs Gains?

    Maxime Bernier Challenges Quebec Political Orthodoxy With New Party

    The host barely contained a smirk as he accused Bernier of wanting to shove a pipeline "down the throats" of Quebecers. "At the end of the day," Bernier replied, "the federal government has the right to approve a project or not."

    Maxime Bernier Challenges Quebec Political Orthodoxy With New Party

    'I Lost Everything': Winnipeg Teacher In Lap-Dance Video Shares Story Years Later

    Chrystie Fitchner knows she made a stupid mistake, a one-minute mistake. And she feels she's paid enough for it over the last eight years.    

    'I Lost Everything': Winnipeg Teacher In Lap-Dance Video Shares Story Years Later