Journal Pioneer

New psychiatri­c assessment ordered for alleged Fredericto­n shooter

- BY KEVIN BISSETT

A Fredericto­n man accused of murdering four people in an August shooting spree has been ordered to undergo a 60-day psychiatri­c assessment.

It will determine if Matthew Raymond can be found criminally responsibl­e for the crimes he has been accused of.

He 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.

Raymond was previously found fit to stand trial after a shorter assessment. Details of the arguments seeking the assessment­s are under a publicatio­n ban Defence lawyer Alison Menard said Tuesday the longer assessment is to assess the mental state of an accused at the time of an alleged offence.

“Did they suffer from a mental disorder which would exempt them from responsibi­lity?” she said outside court.

“In certain circumstan­ces, people who suffer from a mental disorder can be found not criminally responsibl­e because they are lacking the intent element of the offence because of the mental disorder.”

The case returns to court on Feb. 8, 2019.

Raymond is alleged to have fired from his apartment window with a long gun, killing the two civilians as they loaded a car for a trip on Aug. 10, and the two police officers as they responded to the scene. Raymond has previously told a judge there is evidence that would allow him to be “exonerated” immediatel­y because of temporary insanity.

As he has in previous court appearance­s, Raymond stood in court Tuesday, and complained to the judge about the jail-issued orange jumpsuit and orange sweatshirt he was wearing.

“I should be in casual clothes. I’m not supposed to be in orange at all,” he said. Raymond was also upset over documents he took from a file folder and waved in the air.

“It concerns these documents I should not have in my possession. There are photograph­s and evidence. Only the court should have these documents,” he said. The documents concerning the investigat­ion are under a publicatio­n ban, but Raymond said guards where he’s being held are able to see them.

He said a guard came into his cell in the middle of the night and was looking at the documents.

“There’s no (expletive) way someone should be in my (expletive) cell in the middle of the night looking at my (expletive),” he said.

Former friends and acquaintan­ces of Raymond have offered varying memories of the accused murderer, ranging from a boy who retreated into video games, a pleasant supermarke­t co-worker and an increasing­ly isolated loner in recent years. Some business owners have described Raymond, who is in his late 40s, as becoming reclusive and occasional­ly unpleasant in the year before the alleged shootings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada