Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

'High-Risk' Arguments Resume In Case Of B.C. Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed His Children

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Nov, 2015 11:46 AM
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Legal arguments will continue in a British Columbia court today as the province attempts to have a "high-risk" designation applied retrospectively to a mentally ill man who killed his three children.
     
    Allan Schoenborn was found not criminally responsible for stabbing his 10-year-old daughter and smothering his eight and five-year-old sons in their Merritt, B.C., home in April 2008.
     
    Two years later, he was placed in custody at a psychiatric hospital in Coquitlam, B.C., but this past May the B.C. Review Board granted Schoenborn escorted community outings.
     
    In September, the province's Criminal Justice Branch announced it had filed an application in B.C. Supreme Court to have Schoenborn declared a "high-risk accused."
     
    The high-risk label was created in legislation passed in July 2014, and Crown lawyers want to apply the law, reverse the community outings and have Schoenborn locked up indefinitely.
     
    Schoenborn's lawyers are expected to argue today that the law should not apply to their client because it was passed more than four years after the verdict.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NDP Stunned After Dreams Of Governing Shattered By Trudeau Campaign Train

    NDP Stunned After Dreams Of Governing Shattered By Trudeau Campaign Train
    MONTREAL — The soul-searching is underway among members of the NDP after the stunning collapse of their vote in the federal election.

    NDP Stunned After Dreams Of Governing Shattered By Trudeau Campaign Train

    Two Men Killed In Northern B.C. Plane Crash Were Relatives: Coroner

    Two Men Killed In Northern B.C. Plane Crash Were Relatives: Coroner
    The coroners service says 56 year-old Leonard Chapman was flying a Cesna 207 that crashed about 15 kilometres south of Fort St. John.

    Two Men Killed In Northern B.C. Plane Crash Were Relatives: Coroner

    Journalist Won't Appeal Lost Decision In Defamation Suit Against John Furlong

    Journalist Won't Appeal Lost Decision In Defamation Suit Against John Furlong
    VANCOUVER — A freelance journalist who lost her defamation lawsuit against former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong says she will not appeal the ruling.

    Journalist Won't Appeal Lost Decision In Defamation Suit Against John Furlong

    Charges Stayed In Fatal 2013 B.C. Car Crash That Left Three People Dead

    Charges Stayed In Fatal 2013 B.C. Car Crash That Left Three People Dead
    Brandon McGregor of Spallumcheen was charged after his pickup truck crossed the centre line on Highway 97 south of Vernon in March 2013 and hit a car.

    Charges Stayed In Fatal 2013 B.C. Car Crash That Left Three People Dead

    Changes Being Made After Report On Death Of Aboriginal Teen: Children's Ministry

    British Columbia's Children's Ministry says it has taken steps to help front-line workers understand their roles and responsibilities in the wake of a scathing report on the short, tragic life of a young aboriginal woman.

    Changes Being Made After Report On Death Of Aboriginal Teen: Children's Ministry

    RCMP inspector says he didn't know details of terrorism case in B.C.

    John Nuttall and his wife Amanda Korody were found guilty in June of planning to set off homemade pressure-cooker bombs at the B.C. legislature grounds on Canada Day in 2013, but lawyers are now arguing they were entrapped by police.

    RCMP inspector says he didn't know details of terrorism case in B.C.