The Peterborough Examiner

Woman found not criminally responsibl­e in stabbing

- LIAM CASEY

TORONTO — A Toronto woman has been found not criminally responsibl­e for the fatal stabbing of a complete stranger after a judge ruled she did not have the mental capacity at the time to know her actions were wrong.

Justice John McMahon said Tuesday that Rohinie Bisesar, who pleaded not guilty to firstdegre­e murder in the death of Rosemarie Junor, was seriously ill during the attack in December 2015.

“I am satisfied on a balance of probabilit­ies that Rohinie Bisesar suffered from a mental disorder, schizophre­nia, when she took this woman’s life,” McMahon said. “Because of the schizophre­nia, she was incapable of knowing the killing was morally and legally wrong.”

Junor, 28, died after Bisesar stabbed her in the chest at a Shoppers Drug Mart in Toronto’s financial district. Investigat­ors found no prior link between the two women.

“This tragic stabbing of an innocent young woman can only be described as a senseless and motiveless killing,” McMahon said as Junor’s mother and husband cried inside the packed courtroom. “The bizarre nature of this killing … makes no sense on rationale thought.”

Bisesar, 43, sat in silence throughout the proceeding­s.

McMahon said she will now be sent to a secure wing of a mental health hospital in Toronto until she has a hearing with the Ontario Review Board, which decides if and how “not criminally responsibl­e” patients should be detained.

Both Crown and defence lawyers had asked the judge to find Bisesar not criminally responsibl­e in Junor’s death.

A forensic psychiatri­st who was the only witness to testify at the one-day trial last week concluded Bisesar was in the throes of a psychiatri­c breakdown due to untreated schizophre­nia at the time of the attack.

Court heard that a second psychiatri­st agreed with that assessment and both reported that Bisesar suffered from severe hallucinat­ions and delusions that manifested as a voice commanding her to harm someone.

The stabbing — which was captured entirely on surveillan­ce video — took place on Dec. 11, 2015, when Junor, an ultrasound technician, was at the drugstore during a break from work.

The trial heard that Bisesar walked into the store just before 3 p.m. and went straight up to Junor.

“In those 54 seconds, the accused made her way into the store ... and inexplicab­ly plunged the knife into Rosemarie Junor’s heart,” McMahon said.

Bisesar then placed the knife on a counter and walked out of the store, court heard. Junor was rushed to a hospital, where she died four days later. That same day, police arrested Bisesar.

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