3rd teen charged in connection with Jackie Healey attack at Selkirk rehab facility
Red River College student was badly beaten at Selkirk Behavioural Health Foundation in May
A third teen has been charged in connection with the brutal attack on Jackie Healey at the Selkirk Behavioural Health Foundation last month.
The 16-year-old boy from Selkirk, Man., was arrested on June 1 for "counselling another person" in a criminal offence.
He has now been charged with many of the same offences faced by two other two teens, including:
- Aggravated assault.
- Robbery.
- Unlawful confinement.
- Theft of a motor vehicle.
- Failure to comply with prior court conditions.
RCMP said the teen was not present at the attack. But he was a former resident of the facility.
"We were able to determine that this youth was a counsel to the offense, which basically means he incited or counseled the other two into committing the attack and the robbery on the two victims," said Sgt. Bert Paquet.
"We're still trying to determine the level of his involvement. Whether he bailed out at the last minute or if the intent the entire way was to just counsel the other two and the other two alone into committing that offence."
On May 29, Healey was beaten with bats and pool balls by residents at Selkirk Behavioural Health Foundation, an addictions treatment centre in the small city about 35 kilometres north of Winnipeg. In addition to having her left eye blinded, her skull was fractured and some of her teeth were broken.
The 23-year-old Red River College student was on a work placement at the Selkirk addictions treatment centre at the time of the attack.
Healey's supervisor was also injured in the incident. Her son, Kirk Linklater, said she played dead in the hope that would stop her attackers.
- Student addictions worker recounts beating with bat and pool balls
- Employee 'played dead' to survive attack at behavioural centre, son says
- Teens face 17 charges after Jackie Healey assaulted during work placement
Last week two boys, aged 16 and 17, were arrested by RCMP in connection with the incident.
The names of the accused can't be released due to provisions of the Youth Criminal Justice Act.