Times Colonist

Suspect charged in killing of Ottawa family in protective custody, lawyer says

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

The 19-year-old charged with killing six people in an Ottawa suburb last week is being held in protective custody, his lawyer said Thursday.

Febrio De-Zoysa was arrested March 6 and is charged with six counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder.

“I can comment that he’s in protective custody. He’s doing OK,” his lawyer, Ewan Lyttle, told reporters after a brief court appearance that took place by phone.

De-Zoysa’s matter was adjourned until March 28 to give Lyttle time to receive and begin reviewing disclosure from the Crown, a process he suggested would take months.

Police say De-Zoysa, who came to Canada as an internatio­nal student, had been living with the victims, who were also newcomers from Sri Lanka.

They included 35-year-old Darshani Ekanayake, her husband Dhanushka Wickramasi­nghe and their four children.

Ekanayake had moved to Canada in recent months with three children — Inuka, 7, Ashwini, 4 and Ranaya, 3. Kelly was born in Canada two-and-a-half months ago.

Wickramasi­nghe was taken to hospital with injuries to his hands and face.

A friend who had been living with them, 40-year-old Gamini Amarakoon Amarakoon Mudiyansel­age, was also killed. He had a wife and two children living in Sri Lanka.

Naradha Kodituwakk­u of the Buddhist Congress of Canada has been among those supporting Wickramasi­nghe while he recovers.

Kodituwakk­u said Wickramasi­nghe was still in hospital as of Thursday afternoon and his father and brother had arrived from Sri Lanka to support him.

The funeral for his wife and children is expected to be held this weekend.

A monk at the temple the family attended told The Canadian Press last week that Wickramasi­nghe arrived home late from his cleaning service job to find that his family was dead.

Bhante Suneetha, the resident monk at Hilda Jayewarden­aramaya Buddhist Monastery, said that’s when Wickramasi­nghe was attacked.

Suneetha also said Wickramasi­nghe told him the suspect had been having difficulti­es at school.

Lyttle said he has been in touch with the suspect’s family and that they are “obviously very upset.”

He said they do not live in Sri Lanka, but he declined to say where they have been living.

An aunt who lives in Ottawa told Global News last week that De-Zoysa stayed with her when he arrived in Canada two years ago, but that he had cut off communicat­ion with his family.

Any potential request for De-Zoysa to undergo a mentalheal­th assessment would “probably be a few months from now,” Lyttle said.

He declined to comment on his client’s mental state, saying only he had met with him in person and over video.

Police have not publicly suggested a motive for the alleged murders. Chief Eric Stubbs told reporters last week the victims were attacked with a “knifelike object.”

The deaths have triggered an outpouring of shock and grief from the community.

Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe called the killings “one of the most shocking incidents of violence” in the city’s history.

 ?? FACEBOOK VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dhanushka Wickramasi­nghe, left, and Darshani Ekanyake, right, pose for a photo along with their sevenyear-old son, Inuka; and three daughters Ashwini, 4; Rinyana, 2; and Kelly, two-and-a-half months. Ekanyake, her four children and a family friend were killed in their Ottawa home in a vicious attack.
FACEBOOK VIA THE CANADIAN PRESS Dhanushka Wickramasi­nghe, left, and Darshani Ekanyake, right, pose for a photo along with their sevenyear-old son, Inuka; and three daughters Ashwini, 4; Rinyana, 2; and Kelly, two-and-a-half months. Ekanyake, her four children and a family friend were killed in their Ottawa home in a vicious attack.

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