Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Edmonton Man Accused Of Killing 2 Co-Workers Says He Attacked To Get Help

02 Mar, 2017 12:04 PM
    EDMONTON — A mentally ill man who is accused of killing two co-workers and wounding four others at a grocery warehouse says he attacked the men to get help.
     
    Jayme Pasieka has pleaded not guilty to 10 charges including first-degree murder and attempted murder in the stabbings. He took the stand in his own defence Wednesday.
     
    Pasieka, 32, testified before a jury in a calm, quiet voice that he had suffered a nervous breakdown and had given up on life when, armed with four knives, he walked into a Loblaws warehouse in Edmonton on Feb. 28, 2014.
     
    "I didn't know how to get the help that I needed," he said. "I understood it was wrong."
     
    Under cross-examination by the Crown, Pasieka said he was angry at his co-workers, but made no distinction between them when he started randomly stabbing people.
     
    "It was about stabbing someone and getting caught," he said.
     
    Crown prosecutor Kim Goddard asked Pasieka if he had a goal in mind when he walked into the warehouse. He was dressed in black and wore a military-style vest.
     
    "You went there to kill people to get help?" she asked.
     
    "Yes," he replied.
     
    Pasieka testified that he had been seeing and hearing things in his head for years, including the voice of the devil.
     
    On Tuesday, forensic psychiatrist Dr. Roger Brown testified that Pasieka most likely was suffering from schizophrenia.
     
    Defence lawyer Peter Royal asked Brown what effect the mental illness would have had on Pasieka's ability to form the intent to kill. Brown replied that the accused would have understood that inflicting severe injury on someone would have led to their death.
     
    He said Pasieka was capable of exercising free will and making choices.
     
    The psychiatrist said he was not able to come to a clear conclusion on the motive for the stabbings.
     
    Thierno Bah, 41, and Fitzroy Harris, 50, were killed in the attack.
     
    Several co-workers testified earlier at the trial, including one who said he was stabbed multiple times. Mahmoud Ayesh described Pasieka as angry, but calculated. It didn't seem like he was out of control, Ayesh added.
     
    Others said that throughout the attack, Pasieka was either yelling or speaking.
     
    "He said he hates us," testified Axamed Mektar, who was also stabbed.
     
    Several testified no one at the warehouse had previous problems with the accused.
     
    Pasieka testified that after the stabbings, he walked to his SUV and drove to a liquor store. He was drinking wine in his vehicle when police arrested him.
     
    Court has previously heard that Pasieka bought two of the knives at an army surplus store on the day the men were stabbed. He testified that he needed the extra knives in case the other two became dull.
     
    The Crown and defence are to present final arguments in the case on Thursday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trudeau Discusses Infrastructure, Economic Growth With Yukon Premier

    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Yukon Premier Sandy Silver met on Parliament Hill on Wednesday to discuss infrastructure, economic growth, energy and reconciliation with indigenous peoples.

    Trudeau Discusses Infrastructure, Economic Growth With Yukon Premier

    PC Plus Rewards Collectors Warned To Beef Up Passwords After Security Breach

    PC Plus Rewards Collectors Warned To Beef Up Passwords After Security Breach
    TORONTO — Loblaw is warning PC Plus rewards collectors to beef up their passwords after points were stolen from some members' accounts.

    PC Plus Rewards Collectors Warned To Beef Up Passwords After Security Breach

    A Look At The Refugee Process For People Walking Across The U.S. Border

    A Look At The Refugee Process For People Walking Across The U.S. Border
    WINNIPEG — People have been walking across the United States border to claim refugee status for years, but a Winnipeg immigration lawyer says he's not used to seeing them cross over in the bitter cold.

    A Look At The Refugee Process For People Walking Across The U.S. Border

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts
    TORONTO — Canada has long prided itself on being a multicultural nation that values inclusion, opening its borders to refugees and immigrants, no matter their ethnicity or religion.

    Trump's Anti-Immigrant Stance May Be Fuelling Rise In Racism In Canada: Experts

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her
    HALIFAX — The husband of Nova Scotia's immigration minister has been taken into custody at a psychiatric hospital on charges he assaulted, threatened and choked her on New Year's Eve.

    Minister's Husband Agrees To Psychiatric Assessment On Charges He Assaulted Her

    Woman Who Killed Two When She Backed Into A Costco Loses Conviction Appeal

    TORONTO — A woman who claimed her foot got caught in the pedals when she drove into a Costco storefront in London, Ont., and killed a child and her newborn sister lost her bid Wednesday to have her conviction quashed.

    Woman Who Killed Two When She Backed Into A Costco Loses Conviction Appeal