Canada
This article was added by the user . TheWorldNews is not responsible for the content of the platform.

Man Who Killed Aunt And Uncle In Ahuntsic-Cartierville Faces New Indictment

Aaron Seeley, 38, has been charged with violating the terms of a long-term offender.

Aaron Michael Sealy in 2008.
Aaron Michael Seeley in 2008. Montreal Gazette File

Murdered his uncle and decapitated his aunt almost 14 years ago in his home in the Ahuntsic-Cartierville borough. A man facing new charges and violating conditions imposed by the Canadian Parole Board aimed at controlling his schizophrenia, which he repeatedly claims.

Aaron Sealy, 38, said Quebec court man Riodelle said he would appear in Montreal court on Tuesday before Judge Negro, violating conditions he must comply with as a stay-at-home order. was indicted for offender.

This is the third time since last year that Sealy has been indicted. The parole board recommended he indict Sealey in June. This is because his parole officer "had the opinion that the risks you presented were greatly increased and could no longer be dealt with in the community."

On July 12, defense attorney Marine Latour called for Seeley to undergo a mental health evaluation at Philippe Pinel's Institute.

On Tuesday, a lawyer said he wanted to meet Sealy in person before revealing the findings in court.

"You have to sit down and look at the report. It's a little complicated," Latour told Seely in a videoconference.

Del Negro agreed to postpone the case.

In 2008, Sealy was discharged from the hospital and he stopped taking medication when he began living with his aunt and his uncle Alexandra and Ferris Shaar. On December 8, 2008, two weeks after he moved out, Seeley murdered his aunt by repeatedly hitting him over the head while she was lying in bed with a hammer. He then used two knives to almost completely decapitate her.

When his uncle came home from work, Seeley used a knife and hammer to kill his uncle as well. Seeley set the duplex on fire before leaving.

Seeley said he was convicted of second-degree murder in 2012 and sentenced to life in prison. He appealed the verdict, claiming that his mental condition had not been adequately addressed during the trial.

The Quebec Court of Appeal ordered a new trial. A psychiatrist determined that Seeley was suffering from acute psychosis during the murder of his aunt and uncle in 2017. Psychiatrists found that when Seeley carried out the murder, he could tell right from wrong, but he was unable to formulate his intent to kill.

Seeley pleaded guilty to two counts of manslaughter. A Quebec High Court judge sentenced him to three months in prison in addition to the time he had already served. A judge declared Seeley a long-term offender. This is a designation that allows parole boards to impose conditions for 10 years after the expiration of the sentence.

One of his conditions was that Sealy live in a half-baked house and that the order be reviewed annually. Another condition prohibits Seeley from taking drugs. According to his June 28 decision of the parole board, Sealy has repeatedly violated both conditions.

This is the third time since last year that Sealy has been indicted for breach of terms. In his two previous cases, he was sentenced to his two short prison sentences of 51 days and his 30 days.

A parole board decision ruled that while Seeley was incarcerated in February, "because you claimed that you killed a victim of manslaughter out of lust for murder, your words, Concerns were raised about thoughts: You revealed that you had thought about killing someone from an early age, and that your homicidal urges diminished after the crime and then completely disappeared over the years. You denied, and still deny, a diagnosis of schizophrenia.”

When his sentence expired on April 9, Seeley was scheduled to receive two medical injections. did not come. He was arrested at a bus stop.

At his parole hearing in June, the Board informed Sealy that it would recommend prosecution over concerns that his mental health problems could not be treated.

“The board determined that the circumstances that led to your most recent suspension were a reinstatement of a pattern of violations that is directly related to your risk of reoffending. Considering the association with risk of recidivism, the committee should be cautious given the high risk of violence, patterns of disregard for conditions, history of non-respect of supervisory frameworks, and non-compliance with medication.

pcherry@postmedia.com

Montreal Gazette Headline News logo

Sign up , receive daily headline news from the Montreal Gazette

By clicking the subscribe button, you agree to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link at the bottom. of our email. Post Media Networks Inc. | 365 Bloor Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4W 3L4 | 416-383-2300