PEI

Unfit to stand trial, man in armed standoff to be hospitalized

A Charlottetown man at the centre of an armed standoff in August has been declared not criminally responsible for his actions because of the state of his mental health at the time.

Psychiatrist deems man was in middle of psychotic episode on day of incident

Charlottetown police officers had some downtown streets blocked off as they responded to reports of an armed and barricaded person on Euston Street this past August. (File photo by Malcolm Campbell/CBC)

A Charlottetown man at the centre of an armed standoff in August has been declared not criminally responsible for his actions because of the state of his mental health at the time.

Ronald Douglas Gay, 44, appeared in Charlottetown provincial court Thursday by video link from jail.

Judge Jeff Lantz accepted the findings of a 43-page psychiatry report that described Gay as suffering from schizophrenia.

According to that report, Gay believed he was working for the CIA and that voices "from a chip planted in his head" were telling him what to do.

Court heard Gay had stopped taking medications he'd been prescribed for his mental condition, in the days leading up to the Aug. 21 incident.

Police were called to Euston and Upper Hillsborough streets after someone saw Gay walking around with a sword and what looked like a handgun.

When police arrived, Gay was in his third-floor apartment. Officers could see the barrel of a gun protruding from a window.

Police closed off streets while officers carrying rifles and wearing body armour took up positions outside the building.

A senior member of Charlottetown Police Services and an officer trained in crisis negotiation spoke to Gay through his closed bedroom door.

Members of the rapid tactical deployment unit responded to the call. (CBC)

Police left a phone behind in Gay's apartment, to continue talking to him. Officers of the tactical unit eventually set off a stun grenade and took Gay into custody.

Items seized in Gay's apartment included a Japanese-style sword, a hatchet, and two BB guns: one in the style of a rifle, the other fashioned like a handgun.

Judge Lantz called the psychiatric report "very thorough and comprehensive."

"He did commit the acts, but he's not responsible due to mental disorder," said Lantz.

The criminal review board will determine if and when Gay is to be released from psychiatric hospital. (CBC)

Gay sat with arms crossed and did not speak while seated in front of the video camera in jail.

Lantz ordered him to be transferred from jail to a psychiatric hospital, either Hillsborough Hospital in Charlottetown or another facility, as directed by Hillsborough administrators.

Gay's case will be reviewed at a future date by the criminal review board, to determine if and when he can be released from hospital.

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