Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Politics Behind Harper Ad That Cites Mentally Ill Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids: Lawyers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Oct, 2015 01:03 PM
    VANCOUVER — Stephen Harper is interfering with Canada's justice system in an election advertisement that unfairly puts the label "criminal" on a father who killed his children while extremely mentally ill, say the man's lawyers.
     
    In the minute-long radio ad, the Conservative leader references "the tragic story" of Allan Schoenborn, who in February 2010 was found "not criminally responsible" on account of a mental disorder.
     
    "We Conservatives believe that public safety must be the primary consideration in deciding how to treat criminals like that," Harper says in the ad that broadcast on Thursday.
     
    Harper's message has aired as Crown prosecutors in British Columbia test a new Conservative law that includes provisions for locking up mentally ill offenders indefinitely. On Tuesday, they will return to B.C. Supreme Court in their bid to designate Schoenborn a "high-risk" accused.
     
    Schoenborn's lawyers, along with two of the country's foremost experts on mentally ill offenders, strongly object to the ad.
     
    "It's just wrong for Mr. Harper to use Mr. Schoenborn's case to obtain political leverage in an election," said lead counsel Peter Wilson in an interview. "Mr. Schoenborn's been made the posterboy."
     
    Politicians rarely speak publicly about a case while it's before the courts.
     
    Wilson said he's offended by Harper's "prejudicial" statements. Because a prime minister essentially appoints judges, he said, Harper is effectively lobbying for a particular outcome.
     
     
    Five years ago, a judge found that Schoenborn was suffering psychosis when he stabbed his 10-year-old daughter and smothered his two sons, eight and five, at their Merritt, B.C., home.
     
    The outcome of the trial exempted Schoenborn from criminal responsibility, Wilson said. A judge ordered his treatment in a psychiatric facility, rather than punishment.
     
    "The tradition in Canadian law, long-standing, is that we do not treat mentally ill people the same as we treat other offenders," he said, before referring back to the ad.
     
    "It's misinformation, and the prime minister should know better."
     
    Rishi Gill, who also represents Schoenborn, said the lawyers know the killings were horrific — their goal is to uphold the constitution.
     
    "If you simply react to bad facts, you make very bad law," said Gill.
     
    The family of Schoenborn's victims has frequently praised the new law, Bill C-14. They've been highly critical of recently approved escorted day passes for Schoenborn from the forensic hospital where he's being held.
     
    Spokesmen for the Conservative campaign did not reply to requests for comment.
     
    The leaders of independent tribunals mandated with upholding the rights of mentally ill offenders in B.C. and Ontario also balked at the ad. They said public safety is always paramount.
     
    Bernd Walter, who heads the B.C. Review Board that handles Schoenborn's file, called Harper's statements "either deliberately misleading or woefully misinformed."
     
    "I would suggest that the prime minister ... (has) never demonstrated any sound or deep understanding of how the legal system works," he said.
     
    Research paid for by his own government doesn't support Harper's position and instead the ad will only further stigmatize the mentally ill, he added.
     
    The new provisions can be viewed as tougher than penalties for people found criminally guilty, because sentencing generally sets a fixed term of incarceration, he said.
     
    Justice Richard Schneider, chairman of the Ontario Review Board, said experts have made exhaustive efforts to educate Conservative government members who advanced the criminal code changes.
     
    "(What) does not seem to be penetrating is that they are taking the wrong road to public safety," he said. 
     
     
    "Harsh treatment of the mentally ill ... and fettering of Review Boards' discretion will do nothing but make the public less safe."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Will Send 5,000 Camp Beds And Blankets For Syrian Refugees In Germany

    Quebec Will Send 5,000 Camp Beds And Blankets For Syrian Refugees In Germany
    Public Security Minister Lise Theriault says the Red Cross requested the beds, which are left over from the ice storm that hit Eastern Canada in 1998.

    Quebec Will Send 5,000 Camp Beds And Blankets For Syrian Refugees In Germany

    No Choice, But Mai Eilia, Syrian Refugee, In Vancouver Considers Herself The 'Luckiest'

    No Choice, But Mai Eilia, Syrian Refugee, In Vancouver Considers Herself The 'Luckiest'
     Mai Eilia asks one question when she sends Facebook messages to friends in her war-ravaged homeland of Syria: "Are you still alive?"

    No Choice, But Mai Eilia, Syrian Refugee, In Vancouver Considers Herself The 'Luckiest'

    Refugee Crisis, Seniors' Health, Tax Issues Begin New Week Of Campaigning

    Refugee Crisis, Seniors' Health, Tax Issues Begin New Week Of Campaigning
    Party leaders are attempting to shift the public's focus to domestic issues including taxation and health care as another week of campaigning in the federal election begins.

    Refugee Crisis, Seniors' Health, Tax Issues Begin New Week Of Campaigning

    Long-Delayed Trial Of Bruce Carson On Influence Peddling Charge Begins Monday

    The federal Conservative election campaign will face yet another legal distraction Monday as the criminal trial of a former top aide to Prime Minister Stephen Harper begins.

    Long-Delayed Trial Of Bruce Carson On Influence Peddling Charge Begins Monday

    Manitoba Premier Speaks At Rally For Road To Shoal Lake 40 First Nation

    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger says residents of the Shoal Lake 40 First Nation deserve to see an all-weather road to their community move forward.

    Manitoba Premier Speaks At Rally For Road To Shoal Lake 40 First Nation

    Two Men Rescued Without Injuries After Tugboat Sinks In Vancouver's Burrard Inlet, No Fuel Leak

    Two Men Rescued Without Injuries After Tugboat Sinks In Vancouver's Burrard Inlet, No Fuel Leak
    There's No Evidence Of A Fuel Leak After A Tugboat Capsized In Vancouver's Harbour

    Two Men Rescued Without Injuries After Tugboat Sinks In Vancouver's Burrard Inlet, No Fuel Leak