Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Mother Died Trying To Save Son From Hurting Himself: Husband

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Apr, 2016 02:11 PM
    TORONTO — An Ontario man who lost his wife and son to a murder-suicide last week says his wife died trying to stop their son from harming himself.
     
    Around 11 a.m. last Thursday, police found the bodies of Karen Costa, 52, and her son, Jeffrey, 22, at the family home in Richmond Hill, Ont., north of Toronto.
     
    Sam Costa, in a statement released by York Regional Police, says he and his two other children take solace knowing the two are together in heaven. 
     
    York Regional police confirmed the deaths were the result of a murder-suicide and that they aren't looking for any suspects.
     
    Costa says his son had been struggling with mental health issues.
     
    The husband and father says his family has been involved with mental health fundraising efforts over the past 20 years.
     
     
     
    "I never thought our lives would be so directly affected and altered by this illness," Costa wrote.
     
    "The void of their sudden loss is unexplainable."
     
    Costa said the family never wavered in their support for their son, a popular undergraduate student at Western University.
     
    "This unspeakable tragedy that occurred in our family home last week was the result of a loving and protective mother trying to save her son from harming himself," Costa wrote.
     
    About 4,000 Canadians kill themselves every year in the country, according to data from Statistics Canada.
     
    Murder-suicides remain rare across the country, according to Statistics Canada, with men making up 95 per cent of those accused of murder-suicide.
     
    "The rate of family-related murder-suicides has generally been declining since peaking in the mid-1980s," according to a report by Statistics Canada.
     
    Sam Costa will now turn his attention to the rest of his family.
     
    "The words of condolences and support we have received have been overwhelming and have brought much comfort to myself and my other two children," he wrote.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toyota Recalls 150,000 RAV4 Suvs In Canada After Seatbelt Concerns Arise

    Toyota Recalls 150,000 RAV4 Suvs In Canada After Seatbelt Concerns Arise
      The recall covers the 2006 to 2012 model years for the RAV4.

    Toyota Recalls 150,000 RAV4 Suvs In Canada After Seatbelt Concerns Arise

    Marc Garneau Seeks Senate Advice On Rules, Regs For Future Of Driverless Cars

    Marc Garneau Seeks Senate Advice On Rules, Regs For Future Of Driverless Cars
    Canada's Senate, often accused of being an anachronism, is being asked to wrestle with the futuristic dream of driverless cars.

    Marc Garneau Seeks Senate Advice On Rules, Regs For Future Of Driverless Cars

    Groups Set To Urge UN Committee To Press Canada On Housing, Social Issue

    Groups Set To Urge UN Committee To Press Canada On Housing, Social Issue
    Activists from across the country are planning to use a United Nations review in Geneva next week to highlight what they see as Canada's lack of action on affordable housing, access to justice and other social issues.

    Groups Set To Urge UN Committee To Press Canada On Housing, Social Issue

    Nova Scotia Shelves Plan To Increase Pharmacare Premiums

    Premier Stephen McNeil said the changes came too quickly for seniors and were poorly communicated.

    Nova Scotia Shelves Plan To Increase Pharmacare Premiums

    Finning To Cut Up To 500 Additional Jobs In 2016, On Top Of 2015 Downsizing

    Finning To Cut Up To 500 Additional Jobs In 2016, On Top Of 2015 Downsizing
    Canada's largest Caterpillar heavy equipment dealer says it will cut 400 to 500 jobs from its global operations this year, on top of 1,900 that were announced last year in two separate rounds of downsizing.

    Finning To Cut Up To 500 Additional Jobs In 2016, On Top Of 2015 Downsizing

    Trans Mountain Criticizes Interveners In Reply Argument To National Energy Board

    The company hoping to twin its pipeline between Alberta and B.C. claims some interveners broke the National Energy Board's rules when they presented oral arguments at recent hearings on the proposed expansion.

    Trans Mountain Criticizes Interveners In Reply Argument To National Energy Board