Mountie sentenced to 15 years for starving, torturing 11-year-old son
OTTAWA — A disgraced former RCMP officer who starved and tortured his 11-year-old son in a suburban Ottawa basement in 2013 has been sentenced to 15 years in an abuse case the judge said reached extreme, systematic violence that robbed the boy of his childhood.
“This was a breach of the highest form,” Ontario Superior Court Justice Robert Maranger told the packed court. “The extreme violence and psychological degradation of this child was beyond comprehension,” the judge said.
For most people involved, the nightmare of the painful trial is over, the judge said, but he noted that it will take the boy, now 15, “a lifetime to heal.”
Maranger convicted the father in November of assault, sexual assault, forcible confinement and failing to provide the necessities of life.
The Mountie, who was fired after his convictions in November, will serve 13 years after being credited for pre-trial custody.
He videotaped his naked and shackled son while he inflicted disturbing, religious-themed interrogations, demanding the emaciated boy repent and screaming he would “weep blood” for his socalled sins.
At one point, the ex-Mountie enlisted a Roman Catholic priest to perform an exorcism.
In one of the videos that reduced defence lawyers and police to tears at trial, the tiny, frightened boy begged: “I want my family back.”
The boy spent the last month of his captivity trying to escape his basement horror in which he was chained to a post as he slept and forced to use a bucket for a toilet while the rest of his family went about their routines upstairs.
That he managed to loosen his chains and escape is what led to the child-abuse case against his father and stepmother, 37, who was also found guilty in November on lesser charges of assault with a weapon (wooden spoon) and failing to provide the necessities of life.
The father testified in his own defence, and presented himself as a victim, speaking for hours about his fragile state of mind. He detailed the troubles of his own childhood in war-torn Lebanon. He talked about dead bodies, bombs and the day he was raped by a teacher.