Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gabriel Klein, Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford High School Student Maintains Silence

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2016 12:18 PM
    SURREY, B.C. — The case against a man accused of stabbing two girls at an Abbotsford, B.C., high school will move ahead despite the man's persistent silence, a judge says.
     
    The court heard on Wednesday that Gabriel Klein, 21, hasn't spoken with counsel nor responded to questions put to him during any of the his three court appearances since his arrest on Nov. 1.
     
    Klein faces one charge each of second-degree murder and aggravated assault linked to what police have said was a random attack that killed Grade 9 student Letisha Reimer, 13, and injured another girl. The identity of the second girl is protected under a publication ban.
     
    Klein was first scheduled to appear in court last Wednesday, the day after the two girls were attacked in the front entrance of Abbotsford Senior Secondary. But it ended before it began because he would not leave the courthouse cells to appear in person, the court heard.
     
    "This is not a voluntary system we're in. It's a coercive system," B.C. provincial court Judge Richard Miller told the court.
     
    "He's in custody and the proceedings are going to proceed at pace."
     
    Klein arrived in provincial court in Surrey on Wednesday in a wheelchair and covered in a blanket. He rocked back and forth and showed no reaction as Miller asked him several times whether he had anything to say.
     
     
    "Given your silence on these issues, I don't see any alternative available to me other than to send you to the next step," Miller said, speaking to Klein.
     
    He ordered that the accused be sent to B.C. Supreme Court in order for a date to be set for a trial before a judge and jury.
     
    "It seems to me that you would be well advised to start to talk to people, in particular counsel, who are there to assist you," Miller said, eliciting no response from Klein.
     
    "However, if you choose not to, that is your choice and we will carry on to the end."
     
    Neither Klein's duty counsel, Wayne Burns, nor the Crown lawyer has asked for a fitness assessment to determine if he is mentally fit to stand trial.
     
    Burns told the court he believes Klein's mental health is questionable, based on meeting with him twice on Wednesday, and said he thinks a psychiatrist would be able to provide a more informed evaluation.
     
    He stopped short of requesting an assessment because he wasn't given specific direction from Klein to do so, he later explained outside court.
     
    Klein "was making gestures that indicated to me his mental health is definitely in question," Burns told the court. "I asked him if he understood where he was, whether he stood before a court, the process he was involved with and he could not give me any instructions."
     
    The judge said the man's mental fitness, as well as the issues of bail, the appointment of counsel and whether to hold a preliminary inquiry, can all be dealt with in B.C. Supreme Court.
     
     
    Little is known about Klein's background, though police say he has ties to Alberta and that he was living homeless in the Lower Mainland at the time of the attack.
     
    His next scheduled court appearance is in New Westminster on Nov. 21.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judges In Alberta Custody Case Ordered Boy Not To Wear Girls Clothes In Public

    Judges In Alberta Custody Case Ordered Boy Not To Wear Girls Clothes In Public
    MEDICINE HAT, Alta. — A sexual minorities expert says judges need to be better educated about gender identity after two Alberta family court judges ruled that a child born a boy couldn't wear girls clothes in public.

    Judges In Alberta Custody Case Ordered Boy Not To Wear Girls Clothes In Public

    Man Convicted Of Sex Crimes Back In Race For Saskatoon Catholic School Board

    Man Convicted Of Sex Crimes Back In Race For Saskatoon Catholic School Board
    SASKATOON — A man convicted of sex crimes 35 years ago is back in the race for Saskatoon's Catholic school board.

    Man Convicted Of Sex Crimes Back In Race For Saskatoon Catholic School Board

    Winnipeg Police Arrest Parents After Baby Boy Exposed To Fentan

    Winnipeg Police Arrest Parents After Baby Boy Exposed To Fentan
    WINNIPEG — Two parents are in police custody facing several charges after their baby boy suffered a possible overdose of the powerful opioid fentanyl.

    Winnipeg Police Arrest Parents After Baby Boy Exposed To Fentan

    Premier Calls News Of Alleged Nursing Home Murders 'Extremely Distressing'

    TORONTO — Premier Kathleen Wynne says the alleged murders of eight nursing home residents by a nurse are "extremely distressing."

    Premier Calls News Of Alleged Nursing Home Murders 'Extremely Distressing'

    Canadian Blood Services Increases Iron Guidelines For Donors

    OTTAWA — Tougher iron guidelines for blood donors will almost certainly reduce collections in the short term, said a spokesman for Canadian Blood Services as the national agency appealed for more donations.

    Canadian Blood Services Increases Iron Guidelines For Donors

    Punjab Polls: Drugs, Liquor Election Commission's Top Concerns

    The influence of drugs, liquor, money and muscle-power by some political parties and leaders top the concerns expressed before the Election Commission (EC) by various quarters in the run-up to the Punjab assembly elections.

    Punjab Polls: Drugs, Liquor Election Commission's Top Concerns