Regina Leader-Post

Red flags ignored before man threatened to shoot his parents

- BRE MCADAM bmcadam@postmedia.com twitter.com/ breezybrem­c

The parents of a mentally ill man who fraudulent­ly bought a gun, hid it in his house and threatened to shoot people had been trying to get their son the help he so desperatel­y needed.

But their attempts to have Devin Stiene Bihun hospitaliz­ed were often unsuccessf­ul, including an attempt four days before they were forced to call police for their own safety, a provincial court heard.

Bihun’s parents reported their son on July 19, 2017, after he threatened to shoot and kill them, Crown prosecutor Dan Dahl said during Bihun’s sentencing hearing. Dahl said Bihun’s mother had heard him make threats to the general public.

When officers arrived at the house in the Lakewood neighbourh­ood, Bihun punched, kicked and swung a hammer at them. A Taser had to be used during the arrest.

Police searched the home and found a shotgun and ammunition that Bihun bought with his father’s possession and acquisitio­n licence.

The 28-year-old pleaded guilty to assaulting a police officer, possessing a shotgun and hammer for a dangerous purpose, possessing a shotgun and ammunition while being prohibited from doing so and uttering death threats.

Dahl said at the time, Bihun was on a two-year probation order for exposing his genitals to a neighbour and trying to kiss a young girl who was sitting in her car.

“This kind of behaviour gave pause for concern. It was hoped that (the order) with the right conditions might keep him on his medication­s, seeing a psychiatri­st and hopefully that the problems within that small community would disappear,” Dahl said.

Instead, Bihun stopped taking his mood stabilizer medication and his behaviour escalated, Dahl said. While on remand, he attacked his cellmate because the man refused to participat­e in his escape plan. The inmate told police Bihun talked about shooting people, attacking guards and raping female staff members.

The Crown and defence jointly recommende­d a sentence that, with remand credit, would result in a two-year federal term. They said the sentence would allow Bihun to serve his time at the Saskatoon Regional Psychiatri­c Centre, get on a proper medical regime and hopefully receive a clear mental health diagnosis.

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