Times Colonist

Appeal Court restores privileges for man who killed five at Calgary house party

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The Alberta Court of Appeal has restored some privileges for a mentally ill man who stabbed and killed five young people at a Calgary house party seven years ago.

The move clears the way for Matthew de Grood to have overnight passes in Edmonton for up to a week for the purpose of transition­ing to a group home.

A provincial mental-health review board ruled last September that de Grood was making progress as a patient at Alberta Hospital Edmonton, but he would not be allowed to go to a group home.

It said that de Grood, 29, still posed a “significan­t threat to the safety of the public.”

His lawyer argued this month that the Alberta Review Board failed to properly consider evidence from his client’s treatment team when it removed the overnight passes, which had previously been granted, and seemed to engage in speculatio­n and dwell on what-ifs.

The Appeal Court agreed. “We are satisfied that the board’s decision to rescind some of the privileges the board granted Mr. de Grood on Sept. 17, 2019 is not reasonable and is unsupporte­d by the evidence,” wrote Justice Thomas Wakeling in the decision released Monday.

“Nothing happened in the period commencing Sept. 18, 2019, and ending Sept. 7, 2020, that supported the challenged rescission decision. The evidence indicated that Mr. de Grood’s ‘schizophre­nia has been in remission since 2015’ and that there are no troubling behaviours.”

De Grood appears before the review board annually to assess his treatment and whether he should be allowed any increased privileges.

De Grood was found not criminally responsibl­e in the stabbing deaths of five people on April 15, 2014. A trial heard that the university student arrived at the party, which was being held to mark the end of the school year, believing the devil was talking to him and a war was about to begin.

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