Edmonton Journal

Shooter's mental state undetermin­ed: psychiatri­st

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A psychiatri­st told jurors Friday at the Mathew Raymond murder trial that he didn't have enough informatio­n to determine whether the accused was criminally responsibl­e for the killings.

The defence admits that Raymond, 50, shot dead Donnie Robichaud, Bobbie Lee Wright and police constables Robb Costello and Sara Burns in August 2018. But they are trying to prove he wasn't criminally responsibl­e because of a mental disorder.

Dr. Scott Woodside, a forensic psychiatri­st from Toronto, told the jury he thought Raymond suffered from delusional disorder. Raymond, however, refused to talk about the shootings during their meetings over the last two years, he said.

Therefore, Woodside testified, he couldn't make a link between the accused's delusional disorder and his actions.

Another psychiatri­st, Dr. Ralph Holly, who testified last week, diagnosed Raymond with schizophre­nia.

Woodside told jurors both schizophre­nia and delusional disorder are major mental illnesses.

“Both are capable of causing symptoms of psychosis,” he said.

Raymond, he said, thought the end of the world was coming and that people wanted to harm him.

“Mr. Raymond was quite guarded, quite paranoid,” Woodside said.

Earlier in the trial, the jury was shown videos and images Raymond had been viewing on his computer dealing with conspiracy theories, hoaxes and ways to allegedly identify people as demons.

Woodside said that during their meetings, Raymond refused to discuss any of those issues or the shootings.

“He told me he had no recall, he had no control, he didn't feel like it was him,” Woodside said.

The doctor said he believed Raymond could recall more than he let on. He said Raymond told him certain issues could only be talked about in court. There were no indication­s, however, Raymond was faking his mental illness, he said.

Woodside said Raymond described events that scared him. He said Raymond told him he heard the voice of a boy under his window saying, “come out and play baby.”

Woodside said Raymond told him that a week before the shootings, he would have known that shooting someone was morally and legally wrong. But, Woodside said, “he wasn't willing or able to articulate what his thinking was at the actual time of the offence.”

Under cross-examinatio­n by prosecutor Jill Knee, Woodside said Raymond told him he had no prior connection­s with the people who were shot.

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