National Post (National Edition)

Ex-RCMP officer called abused son ‘the devil’

- The Canadian Press

COURT TESTIMONY

TERRY PEDWELL OTTAWA • Society failed the young Ottawa boy who endured being chained up, tortured and sexually abused at the hands of his father, a disgraced former RCMP officer, the victim's maternal aunt told a sentencing hearing Wednesday.

The man, who cannot be identified under a court order aimed at protecting the identity of his son, sat silently in the courtroom with his head bowed throughout much of the hearing's first full day.

But it was the welfare of the boy — and the enduring scars he carries as a result of the ordeal — that was the focus of attention during afternoon testimony.

“The internal, invisible damage will be with him forever,” the woman said of her nephew as she read from a victim impact statement that assailed the justice system and medical profession­als for allowing the abuse to persist,

“Individual­s and institutio­ns put in place to help him failed.”

Earlier, forensic psychiatri­st Dr. Helen Ward told the Ottawa courtroom that the ex-Mountie was suffering from depression and posttrauma­tic stress disorder, but chose not to seek treatment because he thought he knew what was right.

In November, the man was found guilty of aggravated assault, sexual assault causing bodily harm, forcible confinemen­t and failing to provide the necessarie­s of life.

He was initially arrested in 2013 after the boy was found wandering in a neighbour's back yard in search of water.

Court heard the boy nearly starved to death during his captivity, which left him chained and shackled, often naked, in an unfinished basement.

Ward, who was testifying as a defence witness, said the former officer exhibited “chronic and severe PTSD” while he was undergoing a court-ordered psychiatri­c evaluation, although she said the symptoms “fluctuated over time.”

He was “re-experienci­ng” behaviours he was subjected to as a child, including flashbacks, expressed hopelessne­ss and at times denied his own actions, Ward testified.

The former officer, who was fired from his job in December after initially being suspended, testified during his trial how he was abused as a young boy, and how he experience­d armed conflict while growing up in Lebanon.

Court also heard the man refer to his son as “the devil” as he described how he was concerned he'd grow up to be a sexual predator.

“I think there's a link between what (the officer) experience­d (as a young boy) and how he perceived his son,” Ward said of the officer Wednesday.

But the former counterter­rorism officer also could have sought treatment for his own psychologi­cal issues but didn't, she added, linking his behaviour to narcissism.

“I think he believed that he was right” despite what others were telling him, Ward told the court.

The former officer's wife, the boy's adoptive mother, was also found guilty of assault with a weapon and failing to provide the necessarie­s of life in November and was later handed a three-year sentence.

The boy was 11 when his parents were arrested in February 2013. The man sought and was granted full custody of the child when the boy's mother died in 2009, subsequent­ly isolating him from his late wife's family.

“He can never get back the years that he lost,” the aunt said, her voice shaking.

The hearing is expected to wrap up this week.

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