Times Colonist

Man who dismembere­d friend loses bid for absolute discharge

- KEITH FRASER

VANCOUVER — A Vernon man who was found not criminally responsibl­e for beating his friend to death and dismemberi­ng the body has lost a bid for an absolute discharge.

In January 2011, Kenneth Scott Barter, 37, was found not guilty of the second-degree murder of the 32-year-old friend, referred to in a court ruling by the initials N.M.

The trial heard that after the two men had been drinking in a bar, they spent the night at Barter’s apartment.

Early in the morning, Barter used a hammer to beat N.M. in the head, rendering him unconsciou­s. Barter then placed a plastic bag over the victim’s head and dragged the body into the bathtub.

He went out to buy some cigarettes, and when he returned he dismembere­d the victim, double-bagged the parts and placed the bags in a freezer and refrigerat­or.

After the court found him not criminally responsibl­e due to a mental disorder, he was detained in the Forensic Psychiatri­c Hospital and has been subjected to periodic reviews by the B.C. Review Board. In January 2015, the board discharged him conditiona­lly. That conditiona­l discharge status continued through a series of annual reviews in 2016, 2017 and 2018.

He argued that he should receive an absolute discharge, but the board refused to do so, finding that he remained a significan­t threat to public safety.

In one of its decisions, the board said that the extent of Barter’s “inflexible thinking” remained a cause of significan­t concern. “The kind of problems posed by such thinking leaves the accused unable to appreciate the nuances of his risk,” said the board’s 2017 decision.

Barter has been diagnosed with schizophre­nia and alcoholuse disorder. He appealed the board’s finding, arguing that the conclusion that he was a significan­t threat was unreasonab­le and not supported by evidence. But in a ruling posted online Monday, a three-judge panel of the B.C. Court of Appeal rejected his arguments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada