Man found not criminally responsible in death of parents to stay in locked Manitoba mental health facility - Action News
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Manitoba

Man found not criminally responsible in death of parents to stay in locked Manitoba mental health facility

A man found not criminally responsible this fallin the death of his parents and attempted murder of his former supervisor will soon be transferred to a locked mental health facility in Selkirk, Man., where he will remain indefinitely.

Mental Health Review Board hearing explores treatment plan, detention conditions for Trevor Farley

A man in a blue polo shirt poses against a concrete wall.
Trevor Robert Farley, 39, was found not criminally responsible and later deemed a high-risk accused in the October 2021 deaths of his mother and father, and in the attempted murder of his former nursing supervisor at Seven Oaks Hospital. (Submitted)

A man recentlyfound not criminally responsiblein the killings of his parents and attempted murder of his former supervisor will soon be moved to a locked mental health facility north of Winnipeg, where he will remain indefinitely.

Next week, Trevor Farley willbe transported from Headingley Correctional Facility to an 18-bed locked ward of Selkirk Mental Health Centre, where he will continue treatment for a mental health condition, according to detailsfrom ahearing of the Mental Health Review Board in Winnipeg this week.

In October, a Manitoba Court of King's Bench judge ruledthat due to a mental disorder, Farley was not criminally responsible for killing his parents, Judy Swain and Stuart Farley, in 2021,norfor attempting that same day to murder his former supervisor at Seven Oaks Hospital,Candyce Szkwarek.

The judge also classified Farley, 39,as a high-risk accused something he and his defence team agreed to an exceptionally rare and extremely restrictive designation inCanada.

Farley was ordered to detentionin a secure mental health facility, with annual hearings before a judge to go over the status of his treatment.

The case was sent to the Mental Health Review Panel to rule on a detention and treatment plan, details of which were discussed at a hearing Friday.

Sheriffs escorted Farley, who waswearing shackles, into the hearing.

Crown prosecutorShannon Benevides asked that Farley be held in a locked ward of the Selkirk Mental Health Centre long-term,with his only access to the outdoors being a courtyard connected to the ward that is surrounded by a more thanfour-metre-high concrete wall.

She asked the panel to impose a structuredtreatment plan ensuring Farley continues to take antidepressant and antipsychotic medication.

Considered a 'moderate' risk: psychiatrist

Dr. Shauna Sawich, a forensic psychiatristat the Selkirk centre,will be involved in co-ordinating the early stages of his transition to the facility, the hearing was told.

A panel of mental health experts who reviewed evidence in the aftermath of the Oct. 27, 2021, attacks questioned whether Farley may have beenliving with an undiagnosed schizoaffective disorder at the time, as he was experiencing hallucinations and religious-based delusions.

Sawichassessed Farley this month and said he is considered a "moderate" risk. His current diagnosis isbipolar 1 disorder, she said, though he may have been in the gripof some kind of mood episode during the time of the attacks.

He hasn't shown recent signs of psychosis or hallucinations, Sawich said.

"If he maintains stability, continues taking his medication, bothwould be protective factors" against future violence, she said.

Hemay eventually be permitted supervised visits with family inside the facility, saidSawich.

Prosecutors and members of the review board said the authority in charge of the facility will need to firm up details of a safety plan for Farley in light of his high-riskdesignation, particularly around rare cases when he may be permitted to leave for medical purposes.

The night before the attack, Farley checked himself into the Mental Health Crisis Response Centre in Winnipeg. Experts there determined he should beinvoluntarily admitted, but heleft the building on his own.

He went on to kill his father in Winnipeg and his mother in New Bothwell, before driving to Seven Oaks Hospital back in Winnipeg, where he stabbedSzkwarek.

Police tape cordons off a hospital entrance.
Farley stabbed his former nursing supervisor, Candyce Szkwarek, at Winnipeg's Seven Oaks General Hospital on Oct. 27, 2021, the same day he killed both his parents. (Darin Morash/CBC)

Benevidessaid given that he was able to leave the crisis response centre, she asked the panel to clarify whether sheriffs, peace officers or security guards at the Selkirk hospital will be in charge of escorting and monitoring Farley outside the centre in those rare cases.

Three lawsuits werefiled after Farley's trial including one by members of Farley's family and one by Szkwarek againstManitoba health authorities, alleging they failed to provide adequatetreatment to Farley when he sought treatment before the attacks.

Terra Welsh, a lawyer representing Shared Health and the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, was present at the Mental Health Review Board hearing Friday. So were Szkwarek and her daughter.

Szkwarek submitted a victim impact statement detailing how the physical and emotional trauma of that day has deeply impacted her and shaken her sense of safety.

"Anytime I have to go back to the hospital setting I am traumatized," part of the statement reads.

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Candyce Szkwarek, 67, and another Seven Oaks General Hospital employee are suing Manitoba health authorities, alleging they failed to deliver the mental health treatment Farley sought in 2021 before killing his parents and stabbing Szkwarek. (CBC)

After the hearing Friday, Szkwarek said the prospect of Farley escaping during a supervised medical appointment outside the facility scares her.

"I think they need to come down with a more set plan," she said, which should include requiringtwo sheriffsas escorts in such cases.

She also said she wants the detention plan toensure Farley is "going to be safe."

Her daughterKatie Szkwareksaid she's"just glad that all this can be over soon and he'll get the help he needs."

The Mental Health Review Board will issue its decision next week on details of the detention plan.