Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Father Found Not Criminally Responsible In 5-Year-Old Daughter's Backyard Stabbing

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2016 12:48 PM
    LONDON, Ont. — An Ontario man has been found not criminally responsible for trying to kill his five-year-old daughter in a stabbing that took place in the family backyard.
     
    The 38-year-old London, Ont., man, who cannot be named to protect the identity of his child, was charged with attempted murder in the stabbing of the little girl. 
     
    A court heard the man was having a psychotic break and hearing voices in his head which told him to sacrifice his daughter on a day in May 2015.
     
    The girl was rushed to a hospital with life-threatening injuries but has since recovered from her physical wounds.
     
    The man's lawyer says her client was very ill at the time and is "incredibly motivated" to be treated, as ordered by the court.
     
    Frances Brennan says the man had been taken to a hospital before the stabbing to be treated for severe psychosis but was released without a plan for treatment at that time. She says his condition then deteriorated.
     
     
    "It's a relief to him that it's now understood that this wasn't him. The man who committed those acts was sick and very ill," she said. "If he could take it back, he certainly would."
     
    Brennan said the man is a loving father who landed before a criminal court because of his illness.
     
    "He will do anything for those children," she said. "He now has to live with the consequences of what happened while he was in the throes of that illness, that was preventable."
     
    The man hopes to mend fences with his family in the future, Brennan said, and is committed to making sure his illness never poses a threat to anyone again.
     
    "It must be terrifying to know that you have an illness of that degree and he has absolutely come to grips with that," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Liberal Party Reinstates Executive Director Charged In Ontario Scandal

    itish Columbia's Liberal Party is bringing back its executive director even as she faces criminal charges connected to a long-running document deletion scandal in former Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty's office.

    B.C. Liberal Party Reinstates Executive Director Charged In Ontario Scandal

    Tech Company Pitches On System To Link Veterans With Private Sector Jobs

    Tech Company Pitches On System To Link Veterans With Private Sector Jobs
    Monster Government Solutions has been showcasing its military skills translator software, hoping the Canadian government will follow the lead of the Obama Administration in the U.S. by utilizing the program through Veterans Affairs, and possibly National Defence.

    Tech Company Pitches On System To Link Veterans With Private Sector Jobs

    Women Outnumber Men On Ottawa's Influential Council Of Economic Advisers

    Women Outnumber Men On Ottawa's Influential Council Of Economic Advisers
    Morneau on Friday unveiled the federal government's new advisory council — a team that will help draw up a plan designed to get the economy out of a rut.

    Women Outnumber Men On Ottawa's Influential Council Of Economic Advisers

    RCMP Charge Teen With Murder Of 11-year-old Girl On Remote Manitoba Reserve

    Supt. Paulette Freill said Friday that the killing of Teresa Robinson was "absolutely senseless and horrific."

    RCMP Charge Teen With Murder Of 11-year-old Girl On Remote Manitoba Reserve

    Federal Budget Will Have Money For Affordable Housing: Sources

    Federal Budget Will Have Money For Affordable Housing: Sources
    The money is expected to flow through an existing program, likely the Homelessness Partnering Strategy that doles out $105 million to cities annually

    Federal Budget Will Have Money For Affordable Housing: Sources

    Human Rights Chief Wants Border Agency Watchdog, Investigation Of Deaths

    Human Rights Chief Wants Border Agency Watchdog, Investigation Of Deaths
      Marie-Claude Landry, chief commissioner of the Canadian Human Rights Commission, says in a statement that asking for refugee status is not a crime.

    Human Rights Chief Wants Border Agency Watchdog, Investigation Of Deaths