Killer Robert Pickton on life support after prison attack: police - Action News
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British Columbia

Killer Robert Pickton on life support after prison attack: police

Police in Quebec say convicted B.C. serial killer Robert Pickton is in a medically induced coma and on life support, four days after he was attacked by another inmate in prison.

Man who attacked 74-year-old at Port-Cartier Institution remains in isolation, Quebec police say

A grainy image of a bearded man who is balding and has long hair behind his ears. He appears to be in a large room.
Robert Pickton at his Port Coquitlam, B.C., home in an undated television image. The 74-year-old convicted killer is in a medically induced coma after an attack in a Quebec prison, according to provincial police. (Global TV/Reuters)

Police in Quebec say convicted B.C. serial killer Robert Pickton is in a medically induced coma and on life support, four days after he was attacked by another inmate in prison.

Sources told Radio-Canada on Tuesday that Pickton, 74, was clinging to life following whatCorrectional ServiceCanada (CSC) confirmed was a "major assault" on Sunday at the maximum-securityPort-Cartier Institution, about 450 kilometres northeast of Quebec City.

The killer is still in critical condition, Sret du Qubec(SQ) spokesperson Hughes Beaulieuconfirmed withCBC News on Thursday morning.

"The victim has been placed into an artificial coma in order to see whether he can be stabilized," Beaulieu said, speaking in French, on Thursday morning.

"It's expected, maybe in a few days, that doctors will try to wake him up and re-evaluate his condition then."

Beaulieudeclined to comment further on Pickton'sinjuries or plans for his medical care.

"That's not up to the police," he said. "These are medical decisions over which I have no say, so I can't comment on them."

CSC said the assailant has been identified and "appropriate actions" have been taken.

Beaulieu said Thursday the SQ has not yet spoken to the 51-year-old man believed to be responsible as it investigates the attack, but he remains inisolation.

Canada's Public Safety Minister Dominic Leblanc confirmed a probe into the circumstances of the attack earlier this week.

Picktonwas charged with the murders of 26 women and in 2007 was convicted ofthe second-degree murder of six women who had disappearedfrom Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

They were Sereena Abotsway, Mona Wilson, Andrea Joesbury, Marnie Frey, Georgina Papin and Brenda Wolfe.

In total, the remains or DNA of 33 women, many of whom were Indigenous, were found at Pickton's pig farm in Port Coquitlam, B.C., about 25 kilometres east of downtown Vancouver.

Chief Marilyn Slett with the Heiltsuk Tribal Council in Bella Bella,B.C., said earlier this week thatdiscussion about Pickton's assault has revived painful memories for the families of the victims and Indigenous people.

The sister of one of Pickton's victims told CBC News that she felt relieved and happy when she heard that the serial killer had been attacked in prison.

An Indigenous woman wearing a white dress looks away from the camera.
Tammy Lynn Papin, whose sister Georgina was killed by Robert Pickton, pictured in White Rock, B.C., on Tuesday. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

"I said, 'Good for him, he deserved it,'" Tammy Lynn Papin, sister of Georgina Papin, said on Tuesday. "I don't wish any harm on anybody but karma, you know?"

With files from Holly Cabrera, Yvette Brend, Radio-Canada and The Canadian Press