Penticton Herald

Freedom granted to man who beheaded passenger on bus

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WINNIPEG — A schizophre­nic man who was found not criminally responsibl­e for beheading and cannibaliz­ing a fellow passenger on a Greyhound bus was granted an absolute discharge Friday.

That means he will no longer be subject to any conditions or monitoring to ensure he takes his medication.

Manitoba’s Criminal Code Review Board granted a request from Will Baker’s lawyer to give Baker his full freedom, nine years after the brutal stabbing that horrified passengers.

The board “is of the opinion that the weight of evidence does not substantia­te that Mr. Baker poses a significan­t threat to the safety of the public,” the written decision read in part.

Baker, formerly known as Vince Li, was initially kept in a secure wing of a psychiatri­c hospital. He was granted more freedom and privileges every year at his review board hearings, starting with escorted walks on the hospital grounds.

His doctors described him as a model patient who had not been treated for schizophre­nia at the time of his attack. After his arrest and placement at the hospital, he responded well to medication and understood that he must continue to take it to keep his illness at bay, they said.

Baker started living on his own in a Winnipeg apartment last November but was still subject to rules and nightly monitoring to ensure he took his medication. His lawyer has asked the review board Monday to strip away the remaining conditions and give Baker complete freedom.

The victim’s mother, Carol de Delley, has been outspoken against granting Baker freedom, arguing there would be no way to ensure he continued to take his medication.

She declined comment Friday in a Facebook post. “I have no words,” she wrote. Baker’s defenders include Chris Summervill­e, executive director of the Manitoba Schizophre­nia Society, who has met and worked with him over the years.

“He is no longer a violent person,” Summervill­e said.

“I will say, yes, he absolutely understand­s that he has to (take his medication) and has a desire to live a responsibl­e, moral life and never succumb to psychotic episodes and not to hurt anybody ever again.”

On the night of the attack, Baker sat next to 22-year-old Tim McLean — a complete stranger — after the young man smiled at him and asked how he was doing.

Baker said he heard the voice of God telling him to kill the young carnival worker or “die immediatel­y.”

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