Alek Minassian Toronto Van Attack Found Guilty

Alek Minassian 1

Alek Minassian would drive a van onto a crowded sidewalk in Toronto Canada killing ten people and injuring more than a dozen. After his lawyers failed to find him not guilty due to mental illness he has been found guilty on all charges.

Alek Minassian who on April 23, 2018 drove a rented cargo van onto a busy crowded sidewalk and would drive over a kilometre striking as many people as possible. Ten people would die from their injuries and sixteen more were hurt.

Alek Minassian lawyers attempted to blame his Autism on his brutal van attack stating that he did not know that his actions would be deadly. Needless to say the judge presiding over the court case did not believe and would find him guilty of ten counts of first degree murder.

Canadian law for first degree murder is an automatic life sentence however the judge decides how long a person will have to serve before becoming eligible for parole. However due to the number of murder cases involved the judge can sentence him to serve up to two hundred and fifty years before he is eligible for parole.

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A judge has ruled that Alek Minassian is criminally responsible for the 2018 Toronto van attack, finding him guilty of 10 counts of first-degree murder and 16 counts of attempted murder.

In her 58-page decision, parts of which were read aloud to spectators over YouTube on Wednesday morning, Ontario Superior Court Justice Anne Molloy said the accused had a “functioning, rational brain” and spent a considerable amount of time planning the attack and weighing the consequences.

“At various times during his assessments by various experts, he described his actions as being ‘devastating,’ ‘despicable,’ ‘shocking,’ ‘morally terrible,’ ‘a horrible thing,’ and ‘irredeemable.’ Even if he only worked this out intellectually, without truly being able to fully grasp it emotionally or to have empathy, that is sufficient,” Molloy said in her decision

“It still demonstrates that he had a functioning, rational brain, one that perceived the reality of what he was doing, and knew it was morally wrong by society’s standards, and contrary to everything he had been taught about right and wrong. He then made a choice. He chose to commit the crimes anyway, because it was what he really wanted to do. This was the exercise of free will by a rational brain, capable of choosing between right and wrong.”

Alek Minassian admitted to driving a rented cargo van on sidewalks along a busy stretch of Yonge Street in North York on the afternoon of April 23, 2018, deliberately plowing down pedestrians in his path.

The attack claimed the lives of 85-year-old Munir Abdo Habib Najjar, 45-year-old Chul “Eddie” Min Kang, 30-year-old Anne Marie D’Amico, 80-year-old Dorothy Sewell, 55-year-old Beutis Renuka Amarasingha, 94-year-old Mary Elizabeth Forsyth, 22-year-old So He Chung, 33-year-old Andrea Bradden, 83-year-old Geraldine Brady, and 22-year-old Ji Hun Kim.

Many of the 16 others who were wounded but survived the attack sustained traumatic injuries, including severe head injuries. One victim, 81-year-old Beverly Smith, suffered such significant damage to her legs that they had to be amputated above the knee.

During his six-week judge-alone trial over Zoom late last year, the 28-year-old’s lawyers argued that Alek Minassian should be found not criminally responsible (NCR) for his actions due to his Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) diagnosis.

A person is found NCR if they were suffering from a mental disorder that rendered them “incapable of appreciating the nature and quality of the act or omission or of knowing that it was wrong” under Sec. 16 of the Criminal Code.

It is believed to be the first time ASD has been used as the sole diagnosis for an NCR defence in a murder trial in Canada and the onus was on the defence to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt.

The court previously heard that psychosis is the diagnosis used in the vast majority of cases where there is a finding of NCR and psychiatrists for both the defence and prosecution testified that Alek Minassian was not psychotic or suffering from delusions at the time of the deadly attack.

While Molloy said ASD does qualify as a mental disorder under Sec. 16, she noted that this only opens the door to the option of someone using that diagnosis for a possible NCR defence.

“Did he lack the capacity to rationally evaluate what he was doing,” Molloy said in her decision. “I find that the defence has failed to meet its onus on this point.”

During the trial, Minassian’s lawyer Boris Bytensky told the court that his client’s ASD manifested itself in a way that created “a perfect storm” to “severely” distort Minassian’s way of thinking.

The defence lawyer was also quick to point out that most people with ASD are not violent and are more likely to be the victim of a crime than the perpetrator.

Psychiatrists for the defence testified that Alek Minassian lacked empathy, failed to understand the true impact of his actions, and did not demonstrate remorse. They said he had become obsessed with mass murders and the manifesto of Elliot Rodger, who killed six people and wounded several others in a stabbing and shooting spree in Isla Vista, Calif. in 2014.

“It does not matter that he does not have remorse, nor empathize with the victims,” Molly’s decision read. “Lack of empathy for the suffering of victims, even an incapacity to empathize for whatever reason, does not constitute a defence under Sec. 16 of the Criminal Code.”

Molloy referred to the crime as “one of the most devastating tragedies this city has ever endured.”

The horrific details of the 2.57-kilometre rampage were outlined in an agreed statement of facts submitted to the court at the start of the trial.

Alek Minassian booked a rental van weeks in advance in preparation for the attack and picked it up shortly before heading to the area of Yonge Street and Finch Avenue that afternoon.

He was stopped at a red light at the intersection when he saw groups of pedestrians congregating outside on the sidewalk on the unseasonably warm spring day.

Alek Minassian hit the gas, left the roadway, and steered the van toward the sidewalk, directly aiming at pedestrians.

“He accelerated over top of the victims, never slowing,” Crown prosecutor Joe Callaghan said at the beginning of the trial.

Many unsuspecting victims were struck from behind, unaware that a van was barrelling toward them, while others saw the vehicle and were hit while attempting to get out of its path. Some of the victims were elderly and one was using a walker when she was struck and run over. One of the deceased victims became lodged underneath the van and was dragged for more than 150 metres before coming to rest near Mel Lastman Square.

“Pedestrians on the sidewalk were panicking and running for their lives,” Callaghan said.

The cause of death for many of the victims was determined to be blunt impact chest trauma.

Alek Minassian told police following his arrest that he was a member of the “incel” movement, an extreme online community consisting of men who claim to be “involuntarily celibate.”

He later told psychiatrists that he only aligned himself with that group because he knew it would garner more attention online.

“One of the issues with which I have struggled is that this accused committed a horrific crime… for the purpose of achieving fame,” Molloy said in her decision.

She added that in this respect, the accused succeeded in his goal.

“I am acutely aware that all of this attention and media coverage is exactly what this man sought from the start,” she said, adding that she made the choice to refer to him as “John Doe” in her decision.

“If any case like this should arise in the future, it is my fervent wish that, at the very outset, careful consideration be given to withholding publication of the name of the perpetrator.”

Molloy made a point to name and acknowledge the “true hereos” who displayed courage and compassion that day.

She applauded Const. Ken Lam for keeping his “composure” when apprehending Alek Minassian, even when the suspect attempted to provoke him to shoot to carry out his suicide by cop plan. She also commended the investigators who remained professional and ensured that the accused was treated in a proper manner.

She thanked the first-responders who “dealt with the aftermath” of the attack and the “numerous ordinary citizens who tended to the injured and comforted the dying” at the gruesome scene. She acknowledged the bravery of those who “without regard to their own safety” attempted to stop the van and tried to warn other pedestrians.

Speaking to reporters after the decision was released, Callaghan called the verdict “the fair and just result.”

“The Crown is pleased with her honour’s thoughtful and reasonable verdict, and grateful for her honour’s careful assessment of the evidence and insightful application of the law,” he said.

Minassian’s lawyer also addressed the media on Wednesday, saying he believes it is “significant” that the judge decided to include ASD as an eligible mental disorder under Sec. 16.

“I think for mental health law, for NCR law, I think there are legal rulings within this decision that are very significant. I like to think that they are significant in a good way because I think we are at a place where we need to start thinking about NCR verdicts perhaps differently.”

Molloy’s ruling now means that Alek Minassian will serve a life sentence in federal prison for his crime. A sentencing hearing, which will be held on March 18, will determine at what point he will be eligible to apply for parole. First-degree murder carries a mandatory parole ineligibility period of 25 years but the judge could decide on a longer period of ineligibility based on the number of victims.

https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/alek-minassian-found-criminally-responsible-for-toronto-van-attack-guilty-on-all-26-counts-1.5331506

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Fredrick Baer Murders Mother And Daughter

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Fredrick Baer was sentenced to death for the murders of a mother and her young daughter in Indiana. Fredrick Baer was working as a construction worker in Indiana in 2004 when he forced his way into the home and attempted to rape the homeowner. Fredrick Baer would stab to death the woman and her four year old daughter.

The psychopath went on camera denying that he had anything to do with the brutal double murder however he would later change his tune and confess to the double murder. Fredrick Baer was sentenced to death however in 2018 his death sentence would be overturned and he would be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

The victims father and husband has publicly said that he wants Fredrick Baer to spent the rest of his life in prison. Fredrick was one of the many inmates featured in the Trevor McDonald Death Row Documentary which is below

Fredrick Baer 2021 Information

DOC Number910135
First NameFREDRICK
Middle NameM
Last NameBAER
Suffix
Date of Birth10/19/1971
GenderMale
RaceWhite
Facility/LocationMiami Correctional Level 3 Facility
Earliest Possible Release Date *
*Offenders scheduled for release on a Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday are released on Monday. Offenders scheduled for release on a Thursday, Friday, Saturday or Sunday are released on Thursday. Offenders whose release date falls on a Holiday are released on the first working day prior to the Holiday.
00/00/0000

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John “Chip” Clark did not immediately move from his seat when he was called to the witness stand at Fredrick Baer’s resentencing hearing on Thursday.

A tearful woman sitting in front of him reached back to touch his knee – “you have to do this,” she whispered.

Clark’s face was flushed deep red and he kept his hands clasped in front of his face for several seconds before standing up to walk past Fredrick Baer.

Once on the witness stand, Clark answered questions from Madison County Prosecutor Rodney Cummings, but he made very few statements in the court with the exception of one. He wanted Baer to be punished for the rest of his life for murdering his 26-year-old wife Cory Clark and 4-year-old daughter Jenna on Feb. 25, 2004.

“I want a life sentence,” he told Madison Circuit Court Division 6 Judge Mark Dudley. “That’s exactly what I want.”

Dudley granted his request resentencing Baer, 47, to two counts of life without parole for the slayings.

Fredrick Baer initially was sentenced to death for the murders on June 9, 2005, but that sentence was overturned by the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.

The U.S. Court of Appeals cited ineffective legal counsel for failing to object to jury instructions that kept the jury from considering mitigating circumstances and failure to object to instances of prosecutorial misconduct by Cummings in its decision to overturn Baer’s death penalty sentence.

During the selection of a jury, brought in from Huntington County, the Court of Appeals said Cummings incorrectly suggested that the standard for guilty but mentally ill and legal insanity were the same.

The court said Cummings also made statements suggesting the life sentence without parole could be changed by the Indiana General Assembly.

On Thursday, Dudley heard emotional testimony by John Clark; Cory Clark’s mother, Christina Flemming; and her only surviving daughter, Morgan Clark.

Morgan Clark was 7 years old when her mother and little sister were killed by Fredrick Baer in 2004 at their home near Lapel. She was at school when the murders happened, but she said she is still haunted by their deaths and suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder because of it.

Fredrick Baer admitted to the crimes at the time of his 2005 trial and agreed Thursday to a plea agreement of life imprisonment without parole for both murders.

Before he was sentenced, Dudley allowed Fredrick Baer to make a statement in court.

“To the family and friends and community of Cory and Jenna Clark, Mr. John Clark and Ms. Flemming, there’s no excuse to justify what I did to your loved ones,” Baer said. “I know that to say I am sorry is meaningless because it doesn’t do anything to lessen your loss. But I am deeply sorry for the terrible grief and pain that I have caused you.

“I live with the regret of having stolen two innocent lives every day. I can only give you my sincere apology. I know you are free to reject my apology. I will be punished for the rest of my life for what I have done, but I will with the sorrow and regret of my actions forever in my heart and soul.”

Dudley said he only accepted the plea agreement because it was what the victim’s family wanted.

Following the resentencing, Flemming said she wanted people to remember what Fredrick Baer did to her family.

“I think we need to know and remember what he did to a 4-year-old child, and that’s damage we have to live with and we want to remember the true victims,” she said.

https://www.heraldbulletin.com/news/baer-resentenced-to-life-for-2004-murder-of-woman-and-child-near-lapel/article_0160190c-b47a-11e9-a6ca-a341e101c814.html

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A week ago, in Madison County just northeast of Indianapolis, a 26-year-old mother and her four-year-old daughter were murdered. They were attacked from behind, their throats slashed.

The prime suspect – Fredrick Baer. A man with a lengthy criminal record that stretches from Knox County to Marion to Hamilton to Madison.

In an interview with NBC affiliate WTHR, Baer admits he was in the neighborhood that day, that he was high on marijuana and meth but says he didn’t do it.”Am I a cold sadistic murderer? Would I cut a girl’s throat, a five-year-old girl? No,” claims Baer, “Did I kill anyone? No. I’m just a regular person. I didn’t kill anyone.”

Prosecutors disagree.

In Marion County, Fredrick Baer is being charged with two brutal rapes. In Hamilton County, he’s accused of rape, and burglary, and more charges are expected there.

With new charges mounting daily, Baer faces hundreds of years in prison with the death penalty looming.

And the Madison County prosecutor is apparently livid. He’s questioning why Knox County Prosecutor, John Sievers, didn’t put Fredrick Baer behind bars two-years ago, on an habitual criminal charge.

We stopped by John Sievers’ office for a comment, but his assistant said he was in court all day, and he did not return our phone calls.

Rodney Cummings, Prosecutor for Madison County, where the mother and daughter were killed, is also trying to reach Sievers.

In fact, Cummings wrote a letter to Sievers, essentially asking why Frederick Baer wasn’t given a longer sentence for his crimes. Here’s part of that letter:

“It appears Baer was habitual eligible and possibly could have been charged with escape. I would appreciate information you could provide to help me explain why Baer was not incarcerated longer than 18 months.”

Habitual eligible is an Indiana law that would have given Fredrick Baer a longer sentence for committing several crimes.

Here’s why Cummings is questioning Baer’s sentencing: In Knox County alone, in 2001 and 2002, Baer was charged with drug trafficing and possession, probation violations, numerous thefts, robbery, possession of stolen property, resisting law enforcement, escape and battery.

But, Vincennes Police Chief Bob Dunham, says there are a lot of factors that play into a sentencing a criminal.Dunham says, “I think he probably falls within the standards of what happens in most court systems. Everybody knows that the prisons are overcrowded and when we dealt with this individual, they were not necessarily violent crimes. He did resist law enforcement, but it wasn’t a violent situation per-say.”Authorities say Baer, who is originally from Indianapolis, lived in Bicknell for a short time and quickly made a name for himself in the area.

https://www.14news.com/story/1689744/suspect-denies-slashing-throat-of-mother-child/

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A man convicted of killing a central Indiana woman and her 4-year-old daughter faces resentencing next month after federal courts threw out his death sentence.

Fredrick Baer is scheduled to go before a Madison County judge on Aug. 1. County Prosecutor Rodney Cummings tells The (Anderson) Herald Bulletin that he expects the 47-year-old Indianapolis man will be sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Baer was convicted in the 2004 slayings of 26-year-old Cory Clark and her daughter Jenna at their rural Madison County home about 25 miles northeast of Indianapolis.


A federal appeals court upheld Baer’s murder convictions but faulted his defense lawyers for failing to object to instructions that kept jurors from considering mitigating circumstances. Baer maintained he was under the influence of methamphetamine.

https://www.dailyherald.com/article/20190713/news/307139950

Jessica Marie Hann Women On Death Row

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Jessica Marie Hann who use to be known as Jason Hann was sentenced to death by the State of California for the murders of his infant daughter and son plus the attempted murder of another child. According to court documents Jessica Marie Hann (Jason Hann) would beat to death his two month old son. Two years later she would beat to death another child, this time a ten month old daughter. The body of the second child would be found in a storage container after Hann failed to pay the rent. When authorities went to arrest Jessica Marie Hann (Jason Hann) and his common law wife Krissy Lynn Werntz who was the mother of the two children they would discover a third infant was showing signs of abuse. The pair would be arrested. Krissy Lynn Werntz would be found guilty to the murder of her daughter and sentenced to a fifteen year prison sentence. Jessica Marie Hann would be sentenced to death.

Jessica Marie Hann 2021 Information

Inmate NameHANN, JESSICA MARIE
CDCR NumberWB1125
Age46
Admission Date02/27/2014
Current LocationCentral California Women’s Facility
Location LinkDirections
Parole Eligible Date (Month/Year)CONDEMNED

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Jason Michael Hann (Jessica Marie Hann) admits he killed two of his children just weeks after they were born, his attorney said. Their bodies were found in separate storage lockers 1,500 miles apart in 2002.

Already serving up to 30 years in the Vermont prison system for the 1999 death of his son, Hann’s murder trial began Monday in the 2001 killing of his daughter, Montana, who prosecutors say died in Desert Hot Springs, Calif. She was 2½ months old.

Riverside County prosecutors are pursuing the death penalty for Hann by invoking the “special circumstance” of a previous murder conviction. If the jury finds him guilty of first-degree murder with the special circumstance, it will then decide if the death sentence should be imposed. The other option would be life without possibility of parole.

Jason Hann (Jessica Marie Hann), who has pleaded not guilty to the first-degree murder charge, has had severe bipolar disorder since early childhood, his lawyer Brenda Miller said. She asked the jury of nine women and three men at Larson Justice Center in California to consider a second-degree murder charge in light of that information.

Miller compared Hann’s cycles of rage to a swing on a children’s playground — going up and down — and said 10-week-old Montana took the brunt of it one day almost 13 years ago.

“Just as his anxiety and his rage was reaching its peak, Montana began to cry, and her cries got louder and louder, and his rage just exploded,” Miller said, at which point Hann punched the baby with a closed fist.

Jason Hann (Jessica Marie Hann) had been treated several times for bipolar disorder, but he checked himself out of facilities against medical advice and refused to take medication

“Mental illness is no excuse” for what Hann did, Miller said, but she asked the jury to consider the lesser conviction, which carries a sentence of 15 years to life.

Investigators in Arkansas, where Montana’s remains were found, determined she died while her parents lived in Desert Hot Springs, and her body was wrapped inside garbage bags and placed in a “blue Tupperware-type container,” deputy Riverside County district attorney Lisa DiMaria said. Then the couple, who DiMaria said lived a “transient, gypsy-style life” beginning in 1998, left for Arkansas. They rented a storage locker, where they kept a trailer containing Montana’s body. A year after Montana died, her parents had stopped paying for the locker and the contents were auctioned off. The buyer called police after finding the body.

An all-points-bulletin found Jason Hann (Jessica Marie Hann) and the children’s mother, Krissy Lynn Werntz, in a Motel 6 in Portland, Maine, with a 1-month old son, named Jason, who was found to have numerous broken ribs, bleeding under his skull and other internal injuries, according to the prosecution. The state placed this child with foster parents, who eventually adopted him.

Witness Jennifer Bloom, an employee of Maine’s Department of Human Services, testified she and a colleague were sent to check on the new baby’s welfare, and Hann admitted to being involved with the deaths of his two other children.

“He said he was responsible for both deaths. He didn’t provide a lot of detail. He said, ‘I fell and blacked out with the baby,'” Bloom said. She added Hann said he felt guilty about the deaths, and felt he had to keep moving to evade police

The body of the couple’s first child, who also was named Jason, was found similarly wrapped in trash bags inside a rubber container, in a storage locker in Lake Havasu City, Ariz. He was 6 weeks old when he died.

Jason Hann (Jessica Marie Hann) was extradited to California in 2009 to be tried for Montana’s death, and it took four years for the death-penalty case to make its way through the system and into opening arguments.

DiMaria explained to the jury the two boys would be referred to as “Jason One” and “Jason Two” during the course of the trial to differentiate between them, though the surviving boy also may be called by his adoptive name, Michael.

Almost all witnesses are being flown in from out of state, due to the couple’s frequent relocations.

Testimony is expected to end next week.

Werntz, Montana’s mother, is facing a murder charge and was originally scheduled to be tried at the same time as Hann, but family medical problems have postponed her trial, DiMaria said.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2013/12/03/jason-hann-murder-trial/3846473/

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Documents just filed in Marin County, California show Jason Michael Hann is now known as Jessica Marie Hann, and is now a female “to match my gender identity.”

California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Health Care Communications Chief Liz Gransee said as of February 2019, “10 patients statewide have been approved for gender-affirming surgery.” Due to HIPPA guidelines, she could not comment on specific inmates.

Hann’s changing mugshots reflect his transition from male to female, the gender now indicated on her birth certificate.

“Senate Bill 310 allows a state prisoner or county jail inmate the right to petition a court to obtain a name or gender change,” said CDCR Deputy Press Secretary Terry Thornton. “SB 310 requires CDCR to use the new name of the person who obtains a name change and to list the prior name only as an alias. CDCR updated Hann’s records and made notification to the victim on file on Feb. 14.”

On Feb. 21, 2014, an Indio judge sentenced then 40 year old Jason Hann to death for killing his 10 month old daughter, named Montana, in 2001. At the time, Hann and Montana’s mother, Krissy Lynn Werntz, now 39, were living in Desert Hot Springs.

Montana’s body was found in a Tupperware container wrapped in a plastic trash bag in an abandoned storage trailer the couple had left in Arkansas. The couple was arrested in Portland, Maine, where they were living with another son, who was suffering from life threatening injuries. That son was taken into foster care and later adopted.

The couple’s arrest led authorities to find the body of a second infant in a trailer in Arizona. Authorities determined that 2 month old boy had been killed before their daughter Montana, at some point when the couple was living in Vermont.

Hann was convicted 1st in Vermont, and extradited to Indio, where a jury recommended the death penalty.

“These kids never had a chance at life so it was more than deserved, and I think he tried to cover up the crime as well,” said alternate juror Bob Price.

“The Eighth Amendment of the US Constitution requires that prisons provide medically necessary treatment for inmates’ medical needs, ” said Thornton. California was the 1st state to pay for prisoner’s sex reassignment surgery.

Hann in still in custody at San Quentin, which is a male-only facility, and she is allowed personal property items in accordance with her gender identity, such as a bra, hair rollers, or makeup.

Werntz was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison for her role in Montana’s death. She is housed at Chowchilla, but some part of her case is being heard Friday in Indio.

Hann’s attorney did not return a call for comment.

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Jessica Marie Hann is currently incarcerated at the Central California Women’s Facility the home of California Death Row for Women

Why Is Jessica Marie Hann On Death Row

Jessica Marie Hann was convicted of murdering her two children and attempting to murder another one