Time for supervised outings for B.C. man who killed his 3 children: doctor

PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. – The British Columbia man who viciously killed his three children nearly seven years ago still poses significant safety and escape risks, but his psychiatrist says Allan Schoenborn should be granted supervised releases into the community.

Dr. Marcel Hediger has treated Schoenborn for three years and told an annual B.C. Review Board hearing Thursday the 46-year-old has made enough clinical progress to be considered for escorted leaves.

A Crown lawyer at the hearing — held at a psychiatric hospital east of Vancouver — grilled but did not sway Hediger on his rationale.

“You still regard Mr. Schoenborn as posing a significant risk of causing physical or psychological harm, right at this point in time, despite treatment?” asked Wendy Dawson.

“I do, yes,” Hediger said, later adding “we do take public safety into account.

“I do think the risk currently is different than when he is mentally ill and taking alcohol.”

The director of the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital supports the plan.

Schoenborn wore a red-plaid shirt, rimmed glasses and bounced in his chair throughout the hearing. He was noticeably heavier than the gaunt man depicted in photographs after the slayings and a 10-day manhunt through forest and mountains before his April 2008 arrest.

Dawson asked Hediger, who was defending the assessment made by a team of experts, about the role anger played in the killings.

“That has specifically been a concern and a challenge for myself,” Hediger said. “He has consistently denied that anger played a role in the index offence.”

Schoenborn stabbed his 10-year-old daughter, Kaitlynne, and smothered his sons, eight-year-old Max and five-year-old Cordon, in their Merritt, B.C., home. During a trial in 2009 he explained he was trying to protect them from an delusional threat of sexual abuse, while the Crown labelled it an act of revenge against his wife.

A judge said he was suffering psychosis and found him not criminally responsible for their deaths because of a mental disorder.

The hearing was told his current diagnosis is delusional disorder and he suffers from paranoid personality traits.

One year ago, Hediger told the board he was too concerned to allow Schoenborn into the unpredictable outside world. But on Thursday he said the man has “significantly improved.”

The psychiatrist said he’s better able to manage his anger and has gained insights into his mental illness and need for treatment.

The board heard Schoenborn was violently assaulted last September by another patient who called him a child killer, but that he didn’t retaliate.

Dawson, however, told the hearing that she counted 11 instances of verbal or physical altercations, more often triggered by “minor” situations. One example occurred when another patient blew his nose too close to Schoenborn.

She tallied at least 40 instances since the man was institutionalized in April 2010 and said the Crown opposed the release. It would be difficult for him to deal with strangers away from the hospital setting, she said.

Schoenborn has also refusal any programming outside of anger-management therapy and chaplain visits, and he spends upwards of 16 hours daily sleeping, the board heard.

Stacy Galt, a cousin of the children’s mother, told reporters that Darcie Clarke is still petrified that her ex-husband will attack her if he’s released.

“He still has anger issues,” she said. “He got away with this murder, as far as I’m concerned. He killed the children out of anger, it was a crime of passion and he should be in jail.”

She and another family friend, Dave Teixeira, said they were shocked about the practical application of a federal bill toughening treatment of not-criminally-responsible offenders. The law came into effect after the last hearing.

The new legislation provides leeway for the board to extend the period between hearings from one to three years, but the Crown must apply to the Supreme Court for a “high-risk accused” designation, said Neil MacKenzie, B.C. criminal justice branch spokesman.

He said the branch’s position is that the legislation can be applied retroactively, but it’s still considering whether to seek the designation for Schoenborn.

A continuation date for the hearing has yet to be determined.

Follow @TamsynBurgmann on Twitter

News from © The Canadian Press, . All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Join the Conversation!

Want to share your thoughts, add context, or connect with others in your community? Create a free account to comment on stories, ask questions, and join meaningful discussions on our new site.

16 responses

  1. Brenda Kuemper

    he should never be allowed.

  2. Elaine Anderson

    OMGThey are going to let him out!He wont last long wherever he goes but I’m not for this so best you stay away from me and mine! In the states hed never see daylight again, why is this country so wimpy? Three little children never get to play, sing and have fun and he wants to have coffee somewhere? Not in my world.He will now go after his ex and she will live in fear. How awful this must be for her.

  3. this guy should not be let out his kids were great kids and did nothing wrong and he killed them cause he was angry, I was in merritt when this happened and the town has never been the same, he deserves life in prision, no parol at all, hes crazy,

  4. Wendy Trarback

    If they released him and he harmed one of my family I’d go looking for Hediger!

  5. Tammy Jay French

    all this compassion for a killer.this is an instance were the death penalty would be useful.

  6. Once he’s deemed fit…then off to prison for the rest of his life!No Mercy for this Killer…He took 3 lives, and damaged too many lives!

  7. Let him go live with the Dr’sfamily. Just don’t blow your nose near him.

  8. Isobel Sanderson

    He should not be let out, if he is well enough be let out then he should go straight to jail

  9. Janice Rodgers

    There is our judicial system hard at work….this man should never be given a release.

  10. If he is fit enough, then he should be tried for the crime and locked behind bars.According to his behavior in the last few years he has not done anything to better himself.He is fooling everyone.Given the chance, he will do it to some other innocent children!

  11. that shrink needs his head examined, this asshole should never see the light of day again.

  12. For the love of God I’m not sure who is more insane this man who slaughtered his family or the doctor named Marcel Hediger…. How can you justify your actions Marcel…. You taking him home with you to meet the wife and kids? If not you should be criminally charged for anything he does while “out on his pass”.

  13. Avatar

    I’m thinking if there are some risks and he is “better able to manage his anger” why would we be letting him out.How about he stays there until we know for sure he can deal with stress and anger and how about a guarantee that there is proper supervision and a facility that would accomodate the transition.

  14. I don’t understand why the guy should be let out.If he is deemed sane and harmless, shouldn’t he just be moved to jail.Just because he’s not insane doesn’t mean he shouldn’t be incarcerated in my understanding.

  15. Elaine Anderson

    Just another killer they will let out, to do it all over again, and then they will say GEE I GUESS WE SHOULD NEVER LET HIM OUT! Throw away the key and neverrrrrr let him out!

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.
The Canadian Press

The Canadian Press is Canada's trusted news source and leader in providing real-time, bilingual multimedia stories across print, broadcast and digital platforms.