Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man Who Killed Children Struggles With Anger Management: Psychiatrist

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 May, 2017 12:57 PM
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — A man found not criminally responsible for killing his three children because of a mental disorder is making slow progress but still faces serious anger issues, a psychiatrist says.
     
    Dr. Marcel Hediger told a British Columbia Review Board hearing Wednesday that it's unlikely he would recommend Allan Schoenborn be granted supervised outings into the community within the next year, saying he would first need to see a sustained period of at least six months of healthy anger management.
     
    The board granted the director of a psychiatric hospital in Coquitlam, B.C., the discretion to allow Schoenborn escorted outings into the community two years ago, but he still hasn't been allowed to leave.
     
    "Mr. Schoenborn quite consistently doesn't feel he has a significant anger-management issue," Hediger told the three-person panel.
     
    "He does say he has a short fuse, but that is the extent to which Mr. Schoenborn acknowledges he has a significant management issue."
     
    Hediger said he believes anger played a role when Schoenborn stabbed his 10-year-old daughter Kaitlynne and smothered his sons Max and Cordon, eight and five, at the family's home in Merritt in April 2008. Schoenborn has repeatedly denied that anger factored into the killings, Hediger added.
     
    The hearing ended Wednesday without a conclusion and another date to complete the arguments hasn't been set.
     
    The brother of Schoenborn's former spouse, Mike Clarke, told reporters during a break in proceedings about the toll the process is taking on his family.
     
    "It's a day-by-day thing for my sister," he said. "As time goes by it's getting a little worse for her."
     
    It is clear Schoenborn needs a lot of treatment, Clarke added, saying he wants the man who killed his niece and nephews locked up "until the day he eventually passes away from old age."
     
    Crown attorney Wendy Dawson asked the three-person review panel to reverse a 2015 decision giving the hospital director the discretion to authorize supervised excursions, arguing Schoenborn poses too much of a risk.
     
     
    She said Schoenborn's anger issues are entrenched and that any earlier progress was a ploy to earn privileges from the review board.
     
    Dawson said Schoenborn had gone through nearly three years of cumulative counselling for anger management and he still struggles with applying his lessons in the heat of the moment.
     
    Schoenborn attended the review hearing wearing a collared, blue work shirt and torn jeans. He spent most of the time staring into his lap and slowly rocking back and forth in his seat.
     
    Schoenborn interrupted with an unintelligible comment while Dawson was questioning Hediger about the night of the killings.
     
    "Altruistic was found," Schoenborn said. "This has got to be said."
     
    Barry Long, chairman of the review panel, told Schoenborn he would have his turn to offer his version of events.
     
    Schoenborn apologized, agreeing with Long's suggestion everyone take a five-minute break.
     
    Both the lawyer representing the hospital director and counsel for Schoenborn want the conditions imposed in the 2015 review board decision left unchanged.
     
    Two years after the children were killed, a B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled Schoenborn was not criminally responsible because he was experiencing psychosis and believed he was protecting his children from sexual abuse, though no evidence was heard suggesting they were being abused.
     
    When the review board granted him escorted community outings, it said Schoenborn was diagnosed as having a delusional disorder, a substance abuse disorder and paranoid personality traits, but that his symptoms have been in remission for years.
     
    The Crown has also filed a separate court application to have Schoenborn designated a high-risk accused, which would end the possibility of the outings and extend the time between annual review hearings up to three years.
     
    The former Conservative government used Schoenborn as an example in 2014 to introduce the new designation, which can be applied to people found not criminally responsible because of mental disorder.
     
    Schoenborn's next appearance in that case is scheduled for mid-June in the Supreme Court of British Columbia.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub
      Noah McDonald, who is 18, pleaded guilty in court in Kelowna, B.C., to mischief and trespassing.

    B.C. Man Given One-year Probation For Having Sex In Stranger's Hot Tub

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace
    A redacted report released by the Vancouver School Board singles out members of the left-leaning Vision Vancouver party in an external investigation that blames trustees for creating a toxic work environment in which staff were bullied and harassed.

    Vancouver School Board Releases Redacted Report On Bullying, Toxic Workplace

    Norovirus Outbreak Linked To B.C. Oysters Continues To Spread In Three Provinces

    The Public Health Agency of Canada says 289 cases of gastrointestinal illnesses were under investigation as of Monday.

    Norovirus Outbreak Linked To B.C. Oysters Continues To Spread In Three Provinces

    Woman Fined $75k For Illegally Importing Items Made From Endangered Species

    Woman Fined $75k For Illegally Importing Items Made From Endangered Species
    RICHMOND, B.C. — A British Columbia woman has been fined $75,000 for illegally importing jewelry and other items made from endangered animals into Canada.

    Woman Fined $75k For Illegally Importing Items Made From Endangered Species

    Keep Calm And Plan On, Federal Ministers Told On Asylum Seeker Influx

    Keep Calm And Plan On, Federal Ministers Told On Asylum Seeker Influx
    OTTAWA — Canada's national police force and border watchdog say they have the resources they need — for now — to deal with the influx of people entering the country illegally in search of asylum, the federal minister in charge said Tuesday.

    Keep Calm And Plan On, Federal Ministers Told On Asylum Seeker Influx

    From Pay Equity To Child Care, Advocates Say 'Feminist' PM Has Much Work To Do

    OTTAWA — Aygadim Majagalee, a young woman from the Nisga'a Nation in northern B.C., said she wants to look beyond past struggles and into the next century of possibility, where she imagines a revolution led by women.

    From Pay Equity To Child Care, Advocates Say 'Feminist' PM Has Much Work To Do