Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Calgary Man, 86, Charged With Killing Wife Unfit To Stand Trial: Judge

The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2017 02:45 PM
    CALGARY — A judge has ruled an 86-year-old Calgary man charged with killing his wife will not stand trial, agreeing with a psychiatrist that Siegfried van Zuiden's worsening dementia has rendered him medically unfit.
     
    Judge Allan Fradsham made his decision Friday after hearing testimony from psychiatrist Kenneth Hashman, who said the senior does not understand the charge against him, is disoriented to time and place and has become less able to care for himself.
     
    "It's my opinion that this is quite a severe degree of dementia," Hashman told the court.
     
    Van Zuiden was charged in October with second-degree murder after he called 911 and police found his 80-year-old wife, Audrey, dead in their home.
     
    He underwent two months of tests at the Southern Alberta Forensic Psychiatry Centre to assess whether he could stand trial.
     
    Hashman told the court van Zuiden's condition has deteriorated since his arrest. He was initially able to care for himself to some degree but is now unable to even brush his teeth.
     
    Hashman said van Zuiden can't remember when he has just seen his lawyer and yet "this fellow can still beat everybody on the forensic unit at chess."
     
    Since he was moved to the psychiatry centre, van Zuiden — who fled from the Nazis as a boy during the Second World War — gets very agitated and sometimes believes he is back in the war.
     
     
    Lawyers for both the Crown and defence accepted Hashman's assessment.
     
    Defence lawyer Alain Hepner said his client remains charged with second-degree murder.
     
    "I, as counsel, will urge that those charges be withdrawn or stayed so that the family can deal with him privately."
     
    Van Zuiden, who goes by the first name Fred, was born in the Netherlands to a Jewish family. He chronicled his experiences hiding from the Nazis in his book "Call me Mom: A Dutch Boy's WWII Survival Story."
     
    He came to Canada in 1952 and later settled with his wife in Calgary, where he founded a sailboat business.
     
    Loved ones have said the couple did everything together and were soulmates.
     
    "They are the strongest married couple you will ever see. They are as close to being one person as you can ever get — tremendously successful, worked together, grew together," said godson Vince Walker.
     
    "Especially with not having any children, they only had each other, they were a unit."
     
    Audrey van Zuiden had been caring for her husband in their home as his condition deteriorated. Close family friends have said he has long suffered from the illness and does not understand his wife is now gone.
     
    Hashman said he believes van Zuiden was suffering from dementia at least as far back as 2010, with the condition progressing more rapidly over the last two years.
     
    Van Zuiden will be assessed within 45 days at the Southern Alberta Forensic Psychiatry Centre, where he has been since October, to determine how he will be cared for in the future.
     
    Gordon van Gunst, a close family friend, said van Zuiden has become a grandfather-like figure to the staff at the facility.
     
    He and Walker say the centre may be the best place for van Zuiden to live out the remainder of his life, now that loved ones will be able to visit without a pane of glass between them.
     
    Even though he often doesn't recognize visitors, Walker and van Gunst say a card game or chess match would do van Zuiden good.
     
    "If he can interact one-on-one as opposed to through a phone or through a glass, it just provides for a better experience all around," said van Gunst.
     
    Walker added it's important to him that the charge against van Zuiden be dropped.
     
    "Fred is a very honourable man. He's had a tremendous honourable life. He's had great achievements," he said.
     
    "You don't want it to end like that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Murder In High School Love Triangle Earns Life Sentence For B.C. Woman Monica Sikorski

    Murder In High School Love Triangle Earns Life Sentence For B.C. Woman Monica Sikorski
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia woman has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for seven years after admitting she directed her teenage lover to kill another boyfriend during her final year of high school.

    Murder In High School Love Triangle Earns Life Sentence For B.C. Woman Monica Sikorski

    Latest Quebec Politician Is Nicknamed Rambo And Likes To Swear

    Latest Quebec Politician Is Nicknamed Rambo And Likes To Swear
    Quebec's latest politician goes by the nickname Rambo, loves to liberally sprinkle his comments with swear words, and is not ruling out civil war in the province.

    Latest Quebec Politician Is Nicknamed Rambo And Likes To Swear

    Company In Mississauga, Ont., Fined $225k For Ozone-Harming Chemical

    Company In Mississauga, Ont., Fined $225k For Ozone-Harming Chemical
    BRAMPTON, Ont. — A company in Mississauga, Ont., has been fined $225,000 for importing and selling chemicals that harm the ozone layer.

    Company In Mississauga, Ont., Fined $225k For Ozone-Harming Chemical

    Canada's Dominique Maltais Announces Retirement From Competitive Snowboarding

    Canada's Dominique Maltais Announces Retirement From Competitive Snowboarding
    VANCOUVER — Canada's Dominique Maltais is retiring from competitive snowboarding.

    Canada's Dominique Maltais Announces Retirement From Competitive Snowboarding

    Disappearance Of Northwestern Newfoundland Woman Now Considered Suspicious

    Disappearance Of Northwestern Newfoundland Woman Now Considered Suspicious
    ST. ANTHONY, N.L. — The RCMP in northwestern Newfoundland say the disappearance of Jennifer Hillier-Penney is considered suspicious.

    Disappearance Of Northwestern Newfoundland Woman Now Considered Suspicious

    Pot Use On Rise, As Is Driving Under Drug's Influence, Ontario Survey Finds

    TORONTO — With Ottawa poised to legalize recreational marijuana next year, researchers are keeping a close eye on use of the drug, which has been steadily trending upward over the last couple of decades.

    Pot Use On Rise, As Is Driving Under Drug's Influence, Ontario Survey Finds