Calgary Herald

Murder suspect in B.C. officer’s death fought mental illness, family says

- With files from Gwen Dambrofsky in Edmonton. The Canadian Press

A family member of an Alberta man charged with the firstdegre­e murder of a British Columbia police officer say the accused had been struggling since losing his wife almost five years ago.

In a statement, 65-year-old Oscar Arfmann’s sister-in-law says he “was really never the same” after his wife died in April 2013.

It says Arfmann was admitted to hospital in St. Paul, a town northeast of Edmonton, in July 2015 for a mental evaluation, but he was released three days later.

Arfmann is charged in the death of Const. John Davidson in the Vancouver suburb of Abbotsford earlier this week. The 53-year-old officer with 24 years on the job was critically injured while responding to a report of a possible stolen vehicle and shots fired at members of the public.

Arfmann’s family says it wants to extend its deepest condolence­s to Davidson’s family and the Abbotsford Police Department.

Arfmann remained in hospital on Tuesday and British Columbia’s civilian agency that investigat­es police actions resulting in serious harm or death has said it’s believed he was shot.

The statement released by Arfmann’s sister-in-law on behalf of the family says Arfmann continued to struggle with mental health issues after being released from hospital in 2015.

Hope Arfmann said she married Oscar when she was 18 but the marriage lasted less than three years because he was emotionall­y abusive.

The couple lived in the small hamlet of Sunnybrook, and also on a farm near Millet, where she said he would hunt small rodents and birds. She said their split was tense and she suffered a medical condition that caused blackouts when she felt distressed.

“I wanted to leave and he decided to keep me from doing that,” she explained. “I had been cutting up a roast at the table to make him a last lunch. And he says, ‘Well, you ain’t going unless I let you go, and I ain’t letting you go.’ And that’s all I heard. When my sensibilit­y came back, there was a knife in the wall.”

However, she said the incident had been enough to bring about a change of mind on his part. She said in no time at all, he had packed up her belongings and driven her into Edmonton.

After their split, their contact was limited, though they had a son together who she later gave up for adoption. Hope said after their divorce was made final by a Wetaskiwin court in the summer of 1975, Oscar married a woman named Patricia. “I heard by the bye that they were still like honeymoone­rs after 40 years,” she said.

She said Oscar took Patricia’s death hard. “The only thing that he really loved was Patricia,” she said.

 ??  ?? Oscar Arfmann
Oscar Arfmann

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