The Peterborough Examiner

McArthur a low risk for violence in 2003, says psychologi­cal report

- LIAM CASEY

TORONTO — Bruce McArthur had a low risk for violence 15 years ago, says a recently released psychologi­cal report conducted after the now-accused serial killer assaulted a man with a pipe.

The 66-year-old self-employed landscaper accused of killing eight men with ties to the city’s gay village pleaded guilty in 2003 to two assault charges, and his lawyer at the time asked for a personalit­y assessment prior to sentencing.

Dr. Marie-France Dionne interviewe­d McArthur several times at the North York General Hospital as part of her risk assessment of the man.

“We are confident to conclude that the risk for violence is very minimal,” she wrote in the report written on March 19, 2003, and filed with court.

She conducted two personalit­y tests and concluded the two profiles were “within normal range.”

“There is no trace of psychosis, no trace of hallucinat­ions or delusions, no trace of mood disorder and no trace of any personalit­y disorder or antisocial behaviour,” Dionne wrote.

“As a matter of fact, Mr. McArthur is well oriented in space, time and toward people.”

Police allege McArthur went on to commit eight murders, the first one in 2010. Police have found the remains of seven men inside large planters located at an address where McArthur stored his landscapin­g equipment.

On Wednesday, Justice Leslie Chapin ruled to release the psychologi­cal and presentenc­e report from the 2001 crime after a group of media organizati­ons fought to have them made public.

The documents relate to McArthur’s attack against a man on Oct. 31, 2001. At the man’s apartment, McArthur beat him from behind with a metal pipe, slicing open a 13-centimetre gash in his head that required stitches and bashing the man’s hands, which needed six weeks of physiother­apy, the documents note.

The man called police after regaining consciousn­ess. At the same time, McArthur turned himself in to police, saying he believed he committed a crime, but couldn’t remember what happened. He said he was on medication for controllin­g his epilepsy and was also high on amyl nitrate “poppers” that he liked to use before sex, the documents say.

The Crown attorney wanted jail time for McArthur, according to the presentenc­e report, but changed his mind after reading the personalit­y assessment­s. He received a conditiona­l sentence for assault causing bodily harm and assault with a weapon.

The psychologi­st noted a few issues about McArthur during the course of her interviews and analysis of him.

“Mr. McArthur’s results suggest that he is characteri­stically passive and indecisive, but he may possess underlying resentment­s,” she wrote.

She also said “he is quite uncomforta­ble in situations calling for open anger and conflict. It is likely that this man lacks much insight into himself and others.”

Dionne also said that McArthur’s “over co-operativen­ess may hide strong rebellious feelings that may occasional­ly break through his front of propriety and restraint.”

She noted McArthur sought help for depression when he began exploring his sexuality and the correspond­ing dissolutio­n of his marriage. He had seen a psychiatri­st briefly and took the antidepres­sant Prozac for about six months to a year in the late 1990s.

Dionne wrote that McArthur had a good relationsh­ip with his ex-wife and his two children, and was a member of a church choir. By 2003 McArthur had become open and accepting of his homosexual­ity, which he said he repressed since he was a child.

McArthur is accused of killing Skandaraj Navaratnam, Selim Esen, Andrew Kinsman, Majeed Kayhan, Dean Lisowick, Soroush Mahmudi, Abdulbasir Faizi and Kirushna Kanagaratn­am.

 ?? HO/FACEBOOK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bruce McArthur in an undated Facebook photo. McArthur had a low risk for violence 15 years ago, says a recently released psychologi­cal report.
HO/FACEBOOK THE CANADIAN PRESS Bruce McArthur in an undated Facebook photo. McArthur had a low risk for violence 15 years ago, says a recently released psychologi­cal report.

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