Accused killer Matthew Raymond to get longer psychiatric assessment - Action News
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New Brunswick

Accused killer Matthew Raymond to get longer psychiatric assessment

A psychiatric assessment of Matthew Raymond, accused of shooting four people to death in Fredericton last August, is taking longer than expected.

Assessment to determine if Raymond is not criminally responsible for Fredericton shooting deaths

Matthew Vincent Raymond is charged with four counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of Fredericton police constables Sara Burns and Robb Costello, and civilians Donnie Robichaud and Bobbie Lee Wright. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

A psychiatric assessment of Matthew Raymond, accused of shooting four people to death in Fredericton last August, is taking longer than expected.

Raymond is charged withfirst-degree murder in the deaths two police officers and two civilians.

InDecember, provincial courtJudge JulianDicksonordered a60-day psychiatric assessment to determineif Raymond is not criminally responsible.

But on Friday at the Fredericton courthouse,the court ordered an additional 30-dayassessment because "the assessment that was ordered by the court was incomplete," said defence lawyer Gilles Lemieux.

Close up of man speaking
Defence lawyer Gilles Lemieux said Raymond's psychiatric assessment has not been completed and he will return to court in March after the evaluation is finished. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

Lemieux said the law dictates that an assessment should take a maximum of 60 days, but since the court was not satisfied with the assessment, the judge ordered a new 30-day one to add to what was already learned.

Raymond will be back in court March 8 at 1:30 p.m.

When complete, the assessment will determine if Raymond, 48, is not criminally responsible in the Aug. 10 deaths of Fredericton police constables Robb Costello, 45, and Sara Burns, 43, and civilians Donnie Robichaud, 42, and Bobbi Lee Wright, 32.

Defence lawyer AlisonMnardpreviously told CBC that the purpose of such assessments is to determine whether, at the time of the offence, "did they suffer from a mental disorder that would exempt them from responsibility?"

Lemiex said he didn't object to the additional assessment because "it's probably in the client's best interest to have the court know what his actual mental state is."

Information about the psychiatric assessmentfalls under a publication ban.

Raymond was previously ruled mentally fit to stand trial after undergoing a different kind of assessment in November.

With files from Catherine Harrop