Accused Fredericton shooter Matthew Raymond will stand trial Sept. 30 - Action News
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Accused Fredericton shooter Matthew Raymond will stand trial Sept. 30

The Fredericton man accusedin the shooting deaths oftwo city police officers and two othercitizens last summerwill stand trial Sept. 30.

Raymond is charged with 4 counts of 1st-degree murder in deaths of 2 police officers and 2 other citizens

Matthew Raymond's case moved from provincial court to the Court of Queen's Bench in Fredericton on Wednesday. (Catherine Harrop/CBC)

The Fredericton man accusedin the shooting deaths oftwo city police officers and two othercitizens last summerwill stand trialSept. 30.

Matthew Vincent Raymond, 48, who is charged with four counts of first-degree murder, made his first appearance in Court of Queen's Bench on Wednesday afternoon.

He will not enterany pleas until hisjury trial begins.It's scheduled to last eight weeks.

The results oftwo psychiatric assessments Raymondunderwent to determine if he is criminally responsible remain sealed.

Raymond is accused of killing Fredericton Police Forceconstables Robb Costello,45, and Sara Burns, 43, and civilians Donnie Robichaud, 42, and Bobbie Lee Wright, 32, lastAug.10.

Police have said all four victims were hit by bullets from a long gun fired from the third storey of an apartment building on Brookside Drive on the city's north side.

Investigations by Nova Scotia'sSerious Incident Response Team and WorkSafeNB are continuing, the courtroom heard.

I think in most cases it's not possible for people to make assumptions about what will or will not happen.- Alison Mnard, defence lawyer

Outside the courthouse, defence lawyer Alison Mnard said the public should not presume how Raymond will plead.

"People can change their plea or enter a guilty plea all the way through the process," she told reporters.

"I think in most cases it's not possible for people to make assumptions about what will or will not happen. Everything will take place in the court environment."

Asked what role her client's psychiatricassessment reportwill play, Mnard said: "I think it's an element of evidence and information that I guess, you know, he'll have to make some decisions about as he moves forward."

A collage of four people
Victims of the Aug. 10 shooting from left to right, constables Lawrence Robb Costello, 45, and Sara Mae Helen Burns, 43, and civilians Donald Adam Robichaud, 42, and Bobbie Lee Wright, 32. (CBC)

Justice Fred Ferguson, who is based inMiramichi, will preside over the trial.

Crown prosecutor Darlene Blunston said she expects the Crown's case will take about 6 weeks to present.

Mnard said she's still waiting to hear from legal aid whether she will continue to represent Raymond.

A pre-trial conference will be held next week, tentatively Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. if Mnard remains on the case.

Two weeks have been set aside in June forvoir dire hearings to determine the admissibility of certain evidence.

Ferguson said all of the proceedings will be held in Fredericton, even if spring flooding closes the courthouse.

The accused must be present for all of them, he said, as Raymond looked on from the prisoner's box. He wore shackles and the same jail-issued orange shirt and pants as his previous appearances in provincial court, but his greying beard is now shaven.

Defence lawyer Alison Mnard spoke to reporters outside the Fredericton courthouse following Wednesday's proceedings. (Catherine Harrop/CBC)

Earlier this month,the Crown filed for a direct indictment to send Raymond's case straight to trial in the Court of Queen's Bench without a preliminary inquiry in provincial court.

Normally, a preliminary inquiry is held todetermine if there is enough evidence to send a case to trial in the higher court.

Last December, provincial court Judge Julian Dicksonordered a 60-day psychiatric assessmentto determine if Raymond was criminally responsible for his actions.

The assessment took longer than expected and in February Dicksonordered an additional 30 days.

The purpose of such an assessmentis to determine whether an accused, at the time of analleged offence, sufferedfrom a mental disorder that would exempt them from responsibility.

"In certain circumstances, people who suffer from a mental disorder an example would be somebody detached from reality who has a psychotic episode of some sort those people are considered to be not criminally responsible for the action because they are lacking the intentional element of the offence because of the mental disorder," Mnard has said.

Raymond was previously deemed fit to stand trial.

With files from Catherine Harrop