Journal Pioneer

Judge rejects bid to designate father who killed his 3 children as high risk

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A judge has rejected an applicatio­n to have a British Columbia man designated a high-risk accused after he was found not criminally responsibl­e for killing his three children nine years ago.

Justice Martha Devlin of the B.C. Supreme Court said Thursday that Allan Schoenborn does not pose a high enough risk that he could cause grave physical or psychologi­cal harm to another person.

Devlin said based on Schoenborn’s progress, current mental condition and the opinions of experts, there is no reason to believe he poses a serious enough threat to warrant the designatio­n.

Schoenborn was convicted of first-degree murder in 2010 for killing his daughter and two sons, but found not criminally responsibl­e because of a mental disorder.

His case gained notoriety again when former prime minister Stephen Harper singled him out when he introduced a law creating the high-risk designatio­n for mentally ill offenders. The designatio­n of high-risk accused has yet to be successful­ly applied since Harper’s government introduced the legislatio­n in 2013.

The designatio­n would have barred him from receiving escorted outings into the community and extend the time between his review board hearings from one to three years.

Schoenborn killed his 10-yearold daughter Kaitlynne and sons, Max and Cordon, aged eight and five, in the family’s home in Merritt in April 2008.

The murder trial heard that Schoenborn was experienci­ng psychosis at the time of the killings and thought he was saving his children from sexual and physical abuse, though no evidence suggested this was the case.

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