Matthew de Grood, who killed 5 at Calgary party, undergoes 1st not criminally responsible hearing
Lawrence Hong, Joshua Hunter, Kaitlin Perras, Zackariah Rathwell, Jordan Segura killed at house party
UPDATE:CBC News is not able to bring you updated details on what transpired duringthe Matthew de Grood hearing on Tuesday because the judge imposed aninterim publication ban on all of theevidence being presented. Arguments are to be heard Wednesday on whether the publication ban should be lifted and a lawyer for the CBC will oppose the ban at that time. If the ban is lifted, we will report further details on what transpired during the hearing.
The families of five young people who were stabbed to death at a house party in 2014 will once again attempt to put into words the agony of their losses, when they attend a public review board hearing this week for Matthew de Grood.
DeGrood's"unusual" public review board hearing begins today and wraps up Wednesday. In May, the 24-year-oldwas found not criminally responsible (NCR)for the deaths.
"This hearing is unusual on a number of levels," said forensic psychologist Dr. PatrickBaillie."First, it's scheduled over two days, whereas typically the board does six to eight hearings or more in a single day."
"Second, it's at the courthouse whereas most of the hearings are done in a hospital setting it's in the ceremonial courtroom ...so this is a very public hearing and is taking significantly longer time than a typical hearing does."
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The April 2014 attack at the party to celebrate the end of university classes claimed the lives of:
- Lawrence Hong, 27.
- Joshua Hunter, 23.
- Kaitlin Perras, 23.
- Zackariah Rathwell, 21.
- Jordan Segura, 22.
The NCR designation indicates de Grood was suffering a psychotic break at the time of the killings schizophrenia symptoms and could not understand that his actions were morally wrong.
DeGroodwas sent to a secure psychiatric facility for treatment rather than a prison. This will be the first ofannual reviewsconducted by a board two judges, psychiatrists and community members.
Submissions will also be made by psychiatrists and others who work with and treat de Grood at the Southern Alberta Forensic Psychiatry Centre.
"The board wants to look at how has he been doing in treatment and hear from various professionals who have been working with Matthew," said Baillie.
They will recommend whether de Grood should be granted any privileges like escorted outings, based on public safety, de Grood's mental conditionand the possibility of reintegration.
The hearing is being held in the ceremonial courtroom at the Calgary Courts Centre. It is designed to hold up to 400people for things like citizenship ceremonies and jury selection, and was chosen because during de Grood's murder trial, three courtrooms were jammed with observers.
For the victims' families, this is their new realitythe first of the annual review board hearings where they will be given the opportunity to deliver victim impact statements.
"These families all have a life sentence now,"Kaitlin's fatherGregg Perras said after de Grood was found NCR.
"Our life sentence is toevery year, go to the mental health review board and try to make sure that this dangerous offender never gets out and has a chance to hurt anyone else."
There is a chance Crown prosecutor Neil Wiberg will seek a high-risk NCR designation in which case de Grood could go up to three years between hearings.
Throughout the Court of Queen's Bench murder trial in May, Justice Eric Maklin heard evidence that de Groodbelieved he was at war with vampires and werewolves, and had to kill before he was killed.
Court also heard thatde Groodsent ominous messagesin the hours before the killings and told friends at the party that he thought the end of the world was imminent.
At the party, de Grood talked about conspiracy theories, hidden meanings in songs andpatterns in theMatrixmovies, and spoke of U.S. President Barack Obama being "the Antichrist."
NCR statistics
De Grood's father, a 30-year veteran of the Calgary Police Service, considered swearing a mental health warrant in the days before the killings as he and his wife became increasingly concerned about their son's apparently deteriorating mental health, according to an agreed statement of facts read into the court record.
Nationally, about 1 out of 1,000 criminal cases are found to be NCR, according toBaillie. Of those, fewer than 10 per centare for serious personal violence.
In Alberta, between April 1, 2013, and March 31, 2014, 19 people were found to be not criminally responsible. In the following12 months, another 19 people were deemed NCR.
Statistics from Alberta Justice show there areapproximately 60,000 criminal arrests in the province each year.
The board ultimately has three options:
- Continued detention of de Grood.
- Conditional discharge.
- Absolute discharge.