University of Waterloo stabber's COVID-19 isolation may have worsened his mental state, sentencing court told - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

University of Waterloo stabber's COVID-19 isolation may have worsened his mental state, sentencing court told

Defence lawyers at the sentencing hearing for the former student who went ona stabbing rampage in June 2023 at the University of Waterloo are asking the judge to consider his mental state. A psychologist presenteda report onGeovanny Villalba Alemanto the Kitchener, Ont., court that says he had a poor sense of self-worth and found social interactions to be stressful.

Crown challenges correlation between existing mental conditions and choice to attack

Defence speaks on University of Waterloo stabber's mental state

6 days ago
Duration 1:00
A psychological evaluation presented in the sentencing hearing for Geovanny Villalba Aleman says isolation during the pandemic may have worsened his mental state. He pleaded guilty to stabbing three people inside a classroom at the University of Waterloo in June 2023.

Defence lawyers in the sentencing hearing for the former student who went ona stabbing rampageat the University of Waterloo last year are asking the judge to consider his mental state which a psychologist testified may have further deteriorated during pandemic isolation.

On Tuesday, Dr. Smita Vir Tyagi, a forensic and clinical psychologist retained by the defence, presentedareport onGeovanny Villalba Alemanto the court in Kitchener, Ont.

In speaking to Villalba Aleman during several sessions, Tyagisaid she learnedhe had a poor sense of self-worth and found social interactions to be stressful. She has also diagnosed him with bipolar disorder, adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)andautism spectrum disorder (ASD).

Tyagi testified on the third day of the week-long sentencing, which began Monday with victim impact statements, including from associate professor Katherine Fulferand the two students who were stabbed during a gender-studies class in Hagey Hall in June 2023.

WATCH | Intent of ex-student's actions discussed during sentencing hearing Tuesday:

On Tuesday, the Crown detailed the four assault-related chargeshe pleaded guilty to this June, as well as terror-related offences that are being considered as part of sentencing.

Campus-goers still feel unsafe, Crown says

In commenting onTyagi's findings,Crown attorney Althea Francis told the hearing in the Ontario Court of Justice that there may be a correlation between his mental condition and his choice to carry out the attack, but there was no direct causation.

Francis said many people onthe university campus still feelunsafe because of the attack and Villalba Aleman's ideology, which he outlined in his manifesto.

Justice Frances Brennan reminded the court that Villalba Aleman's political ideology is not on trial.

"The court here is not to sentence his views," Brennan said. "It is to sentence his conduct ... the willingness to act out violently."

In response, defence lawyerMel Edwardh called on Tyagi to testify virtually.

The psychologist said she found Villalba Aleman to have poor self-worth, except for when it comesto his academic achievements, which give him pride.

She noted he has had a long history of self-harm, with reoccurring hair pulling,punching himself in the stomach and slapping himself on his face.

Tyagi said he had come largely unprepared to cope with migration and university life as an international student, and as a result, he failed several courses, which compounded his feelings of unworthiness.
man smiling with glasses
Geovanny Villalba-Aleman, 25, pleaded guilty to four charges in connection with the stabbing. A forensic psychologist at the sentencing hearing testified Wednesday on his mental state. (Geovanny Villalba-Aleman/Facebook)

Strictly online courses during the pandemic further isolated him from professors and other people, worsening his academic standing and deepening his depression, Tyagi said.

In addition to his deteriorating mental state, she said,he had financial difficulties and suffered fromfood insecurity while a student at the University of Waterloo.

She said he began to develop delusions that specific individuals on campus were stamping out free speech and felt like he had to personally do something about it.

Tyagi saidthose elements may have disconnected him from reality, leading to apsychotic break.

Under cross-examination byCrown attorney Armin Sethi, Tyagi said her role is only to tell the court what psychological factors were in play in the months leading up to the event not to determine his moral culpability during the attack.