The Standard (St. Catharines)

Van killer has shown no anger toward women

Forensic psychiatri­st says accused showed complete lack of emotion

- LIAM CASEY

TORONTO — A man who drove a van down a Toronto sidewalk and killed 10 people showed no anger toward women during his psychiatri­c evaluation­s, court heard Friday.

Dr. John Bradford, one of the country’s foremost forensic psychiatri­sts, testified that Alek Minassian’s complete lack of anger and emotion is in direct contrast with Elliot Rodger, an American mass murderer he purportedl­y idolized.

Minassian has pleaded not guilty to 10 counts of first-degree murder and 16 of attempted murder.

The defence argues the 28year-old from Richmond Hill, Ont., should be found not criminally responsibl­e for his actions on April 23, 2018 due to autism spectrum disorder. His state of mind at the time is the sole issue at trial, which is being held by video conference due to the pandemic.

After a brief cross examinatio­n by the prosecutio­n, Justice Anne Molloy, who is presiding over the case without a jury, took time to ask Bradford several questions.

“Did he ever talk to you about any degree of hatred or rage directed toward women?” the judge asked.

“In my contact with him, he didn’t show any anger whatsoever,” Bradford said.

“I don’t think he expressed any particular hatred, other than in the context of what he focused on with Elliot Rodger and why he followed that.”

Rodger went on a rampage in Isla Vista, Calif., in May 2014, killing six people and injuring14 others before killing himself.

His “manifesto” and his video before the murders focused on his hatred toward women and has found an audience in the bowels of the internet where he is treated as the forefather of so-called “incels,” men who are involuntar­ily celibate.

Minassian told police hours after the attack that he killed innocent people as part of an “incel uprising.” In that world, incels are on the bottom rung of society, below alpha males called Chads and the women they sleep with, called Stacys, and below them are “normies,” or normal people.

Minassian told a police detective he hoped the attack would upend that societal order.

But in his interviews with Bradford, Minassian changed his story.

“He denies that is part of incel although he has been disappoint­ed in the past with his social interactio­ns, but when confronted about being extremely angry, enraged, he denies this now categorica­lly and maintains that he (has) only been disappoint­ed and that he made this up about being enraged,” Bradford wrote in his report. Bradford said Minassian told him while he was obsessed with the “incel theme,” he was not a follower.

Minassian also told Bradford his motivation was due to his anxiety about failing at a new job as a computer programmer he was set to begin a week after the attack.

He also said he was motivated by the notoriety the attack would bring, even though he had planned to die in a “suicideby-cop.”

Dr. Alexander Westphal, an American psychiatri­st who is set to testify Monday, is expected to be the lone voice to say Minassian is not criminally responsibl­e for his actions due to autism spectrum disorder.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Police are seen near a damaged van in Toronto after it mounted a sidewalk and crashed into pedestrian­s in 2018. Alek Minassian has pleaded not guilty.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Police are seen near a damaged van in Toronto after it mounted a sidewalk and crashed into pedestrian­s in 2018. Alek Minassian has pleaded not guilty.

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