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Man who killed his mother with an axe in Gibsons found not criminally responsible

Kevin Webster remains in care at psychiatric hospital
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A man who killed his mother in Gibsons in 2020 was found by a B.C. Supreme Court judge last week to be not criminally responsible for his actions. (Black Press Media file photo)

The man who killed his mother with an axe over the Christmas holidays in 2020 has been found not criminally responsible for his actions.

The B.C. Supreme Court handed down its decision Thursday, May 5, in the case of Kevin Webster, who killed Moirin Webster on Dec. 27, 2020, in Gibsons.

RCMP officers arrived at the house at about 11:30 p.m. that night in response to a 911 call, and detained Kevin Webster who was at the front door speaking on the phone with a dispatcher, according to court records. His mother was found in a second-floor bedroom dead with 鈥済rievous wounds to the head鈥 and a bloody axe on the pillow beside her.

Judge Geoffrey Gomery said, in his judgment, that Webster called police after the attack and 鈥減rovided an account of the assault that includes details that could only have been known to the murderer or a witness鈥 and 鈥渢here is nothing at all to indicate鈥 that anyone else was at the house.

A forensic psychiatrist told the court that Webster has 鈥渁 well-established diagnosis of treatment refractory schizophrenia, as well as multiple substance use disorder,鈥 though there is no evidence he consumed drugs or alcohol on the night of the killing and he was not intoxicated at the time of the crime.

Webster gave various accounts as to his reasons for the killing: fear that family members had a plan to murder him and steal his possessions, a response to being scolded for smoking in the living room, and the notion that he was 鈥渢old鈥 or compelled to kill.

鈥淲ebster鈥檚 thinking when he attacked his mother was psychotically driven. It was grounded in an entrenched paranoid belief that he was the target of a murderous conspiracy,鈥 the judge said. 鈥淲hat is striking is that it was also uncertain and ambivalent. In simple terms, [he] did not know what to think.鈥

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The court heard that in the weeks leading up to the killing, Webster had been in a residential care facility which 鈥渃ould not manage鈥 his behaviour, discharged to a shelter and then 鈥渋nvoluntarily鈥 admitted to a hospital psychiatric ward before his mother took him in. On Christmas Day, two days before the killing, Webster stopped at a hospital twice asking to speak to a psychiatrist, then tried a third time, asking to see any doctor, but wouldn鈥檛 provide reasons for seeking care and left.

The judge said that not only was Webster 鈥減reoccupied by delusional beliefs鈥 at the time of the crime, but his whole thinking process was irrational.

鈥淗is mental disorder had deprived him of the ability to know that his conduct was wrong,鈥 the judge concluded.

Webster will remain in the custody at a psychiatric hospital pending a review board decision within 45 days.



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