Journal Pioneer

‘My intent was to kill him’

Chase Douglas Aslantogmu­s to serve to two years in prison for attempted murder

- BY RYAN ROSS

A 20-year-old man who stabbed his victim 14 times at a Charlottet­own apartment in a dispute over a pair of headphones is heading to a federal prison. Chase Joseph Douglas Aslantogmu­s appeared before Judge John Douglas in provincial court in Charlottet­own Friday for sentencing after previously pleading guilty to attempted murder. Douglas sentenced Aslantogmu­s to serve 37.5 months and with credit for time spent in custody since his arrest in September 2017, he was left with two years on his sentence. As Crown attorney Lisa Goulden made her submission­s Friday, she told the court Aslantogmu­s took the law into his own hands. “In this case, an argument over headphones nearly got a young man killed,” she said. Those headphones belonged to the victim who let someone who was friends with Aslantogmu­s borrow them in September. After the friend didn’t return the headphones, the victim’s girlfriend contacted Aslantogmu­s, saying she didn’t want to go to the police. She told Aslantogmu­s she wanted him to help find the headphones. “He took that as a threat,” Goulden said Aslantogmu­s went to where the victim was staying, threw a bat at the victim, hitting him in the head, and stabbed him 14 times, even as the man tried to crawl away. He only stopping stabbing the victim because he had hurt his hand prior to the incident and it started to get sore. The court heard Aslantogmu­s told police he was aiming for the victim’s throat. “My intent was to kill him,” Aslantogmu­s said. Goulden said that at the time, Aslantogmu­s didn’t show any remorse and told police it would be a lesson for the victim who would remember what happens if he mouths off again. The victim spent more than a week in hospital with injuries that included a punctured lung and a stab wound to his face that was close to one of his eyes. Goulden said it was just by luck that the victim didn’t die. During Friday’s proceeding­s, the court heard details of Aslantogmu­s’s history of serious mental health issues, including a stay at the Peel Children’s Centre in Moncton, which is a facility for children. He aged out of the facility at 19 and moved back to P.E.I. The court heard Aslantogmu­s had behavioura­l issues in his life before then, including setting a fire in his home when he was four. Aslantogmu­s will serve his sentence in a federal prison and will be on probation for three years after his release, during which time he must undergo counsellin­g or treatment as directed. He will be on electronic monitoring, if directed, and is banned from contact with the victim and the victim’s girlfriend. Aslantogmu­s will be under a 10-year weapon prohibitio­n and must provide a DNA sample for the national databank.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada