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Authors: Jerry Langton

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BOOK: Rage
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Dennis asked her why she had picked the name “Biteforblood.” She said she knew of a band with that name and it sounded cool.
“You disagree you employed the term ‘biteforblood’ because of an interest in vampirism?” he asked her.
“Yes, I disagree with you,” she answered.
Nobody called her a “force for goodness” that day.
After the rest of the witnesses, including Ralston, delivered pretty much the same testimony they had in the first trial, Nuttall delivered his closing argument on Kevin’s behalf on February 17. As in the previous trial, he admitted that Kevin, and Kevin alone, killed Johnathon. And again he argued that the appropriate charge should be manslaughter, not murder, because the stabbing wasn’t planned, but had occurred during a fit of rage. “Kevin went berserk,” he told the jury. And, as before, he indicated that the ferocity of the attack proved his hypothesis. “The act speaks for itself,” he lawyer said. “He went on and on and on stabbing him.”
As for the attack on Ralston, Nuttall attributed it to “ongoing tensions” between the two of them, which he said “sparked a fight.” If he had planned to kill his stepfather, as the Crown claimed, why didn’t he use one of the knives or the meat cleaver, both of which were handy, instead of his fists?
Goody asked the jury to remember the tape. He reminded them that Kevin had told Ashley that he had planned to kill his entire family one by one as they returned home. When Johnathon got home, Kevin almost immediately murdered him. And when Ralston came in later, Kevin attacked him quickly, with intent to kill. “He said exactly what he was planning and intended to do,” Goody said. He also told them that Kevin’s being diagnosed with Intermittent Explosive Disorder did nothing to change that.
Dennis and Lenzin argued that Tim and Pierre were nothing more than witnesses to Kevin’s fit of rage. The call, they said, was simply Tim’s only way to try to win Ashley back. He was a young man in love; he was desperate. She was so much prettier, richer, more popular and intelligent than him, he knew he had to work hard. He decided to appeal to the one thing he knew she loved—blood—and offered it to her. Of course, these were just idle boasts, like his claims of murdering passersby in the Don Valley. He had no idea Kevin would actually go through with it.
As for Pierre, he was simply going along for the ride. He was trying to help his new buddy Tim get back in good standing with his obviously kinky girlfriend.
Goody argued that the call and the attacks were just too much of a coincidence. Clearly, they had cooked up a plan to murder Kevin’s family, and he had gone through with it. “All were in the house, together, waiting,” he reminded them, and all three, he argued, were guilty.
On the fifth day of deliberations—February 28, 2006—the jury had come to a decision. The three young men rose as the jurors filed in. The foreman read the verdict. Kevin was found guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Johnathon and guilty in the charge of attempted murder against Ralston. Tim was guilty of manslaughter in the death of Johnathon. Pierre was found not guilty in the death of Johnathon and not guilty of the attempted murder of Ralston.
The courtroom was silent until McCombs looked at Pierre and told him: “You are free to leave the box.” Stunned, Pierre walked away from the box, past the swinging door into the gallery and then ran into the arms of his mother, father and brother.
Tim began to cry as the court officers handcuffed him and Kevin, preparing to take them away again. Joanne could be heard crying as well while Kevin and Tim were led out of the room.
Outside the court, Pierre and his family rushed into a waiting minivan and left. They didn’t make any comment to the herd of reporters who had followed them out. Instead, Lenzin spoke on their behalf.
He thanked the jury for their wise decision. “The only way I can interpret this verdict is that the jury came to the conclusion that that phone call did not indicate a serious plan,” he said. Beaming, he told
The Toronto Star’s
Peter Small, “I have never in my life been so pleased to reunite a young man with his family.”
When Small asked him why the family had left so quickly and without comment, Lenzin replied, “I think he wants to sit down with his mom and dad and eat something other than institution food.”
After conferring with his client, John Dennis came out to the street to tell reporters that, despite the streams of tears running down his face, Tim was happy with the verdict. “His emotions have always been very close to the surface during this whole trial,” he said, adding that watching Kevin kill his little brother “traumatized” Tim and that he felt deep remorse throughout the trial. Dennis summed up Tim’s actions in the killing by saying, “He was at the wrong place at the wrong time.” When asked why his client received a manslaughter conviction despite the fact Kevin had admitted to being solely responsible for the killing, Dennis blamed it on the e-mail Tim sent Ashley in which he told her he gave Kevin the knife, although Tim had twice denied that particular detail in court.
Nuttall came out last and spoke for Kevin. He said that the jury found him “fully responsible” for Johnathon’s death. When asked why he thought the jury did not take into account the Intermittent Explosive Disorder diagnosis, he said that they probably did, but must have felt that: “It wasn’t sufficient rage to deprive him of the ability to attend what he was doing or plan and deliberate.”
He also expressed a desire to see Kevin sentenced to a youth facility, so that he could have a chance to get the psychological help he needs.
Wark spoke for Joanne and Ralston. He said that this was just one point in a long and trying process that had taken a huge emotional toll on all of them, but especially Joanne. “She’s lost two sons, one being the victim, one being the accused,” he said. “God forbid that any one of us should be in that position.” A reporter asked about Joanne’s relationship with Kevin, noting that the two rarely even glanced at one another during either trial. Wark denied that she was ignoring Kevin. “She’s still his mother,” he reminded the media.
While Kevin’s guilt was now clearly established, his sentence was anything but. If McCombs decided Kevin should be sentenced as an adult, the minimum sentence he would receive would be life in prison with no chance at parole for the first 10 years. But if he was deemed a young offender, the maximum he could receive would be six years in a juvenile facility and four in community supervision.
Michelle Mandel, a columnist for
The Toronto Sun
, later learned that the first thing Kevin did when he returned to Sprucedale was to go for a swim in the facility’s pool. She surmised that he needed to calm his nerves.
CHAPTER 8
Big Enough to Know Better?
It was May when the hearings to determine sentencing began. Crown Attorney Anna Tenhouse told the court that the drawings discovered in Kevin’s backpack were a good indicator of how disturbed he really was. She described them as featuring “rather scary figures full of knives and using knives.”
Nuttall countered that he considered the drawings to be “fairly benign” and explained that Kevin had made them at a troubled time before the murder in an effort to be accepted into an art school like his friend Pierre had been. He suggested that Kevin be given an opportunity to explain the drawings in court.
Justice McCombs disagreed. Instead, he wanted the drawings to be part of the evidence handed over to the psychiatric professionals who would be examining Kevin and Tim for the next month. He also took a moment to scold both teams for how long it had taken them to assemble their evidence for the sentencing round. McCombs reminded them of how emotional Joanne had been throughout the trial and that every moment it dragged on only made it more painful for her.
It was the beginning of September before Ian Swayze, a forensic psychiatrist from Toronto’s Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, began to testify on his assessment of Kevin’s psyche. The doctor had been before McCombs once before, in June, to ask for sufficient funding and resources to carry out the task. McCombs quickly agreed.
After the assessment, Swayze painted a very disturbing psychological portrait of Kevin—one somewhat at odds with the one Dominique Bourget had presented during the trial itself. He described the young man—now 19—as a “smoldering volcano” and said: “He has a serious and pervasive personality disorder. We are dealing with a gentleman who requires, really, a multiple therapeutic intervention over a protracted period of time.”
Calling Kevin’s “the most serious case, personally and professionally, that I have been involved with,” Swayze described the teen as a “psychopath,” which he explained is a person without “conscience, empathy and remorse.” He said the condition is also “stubbornly resistant to treatment.”
Tenhouse asked Swayze how much Kevin had progressed since killing his little brother almost three years ago.
“I would suggest that Kevin is likely very close to being the same individual as the day he was detained,” he said. “So we are starting from square one.”
The next witness was less strident in his opinion of Kevin’s illness. Marc Levine, a counselor at the Sprucedale Youth Centre where Kevin was being held, testified that Kevin had actually shown him some remorse in custody, once telling him that Johnathon “didn’t deserve to die because he was the most innocent in the family.”
Nuttall then asked him if he thought Kevin was making any progress. Levine said that Kevin himself seemed to think so. When Levine asked him if he was a risk to the community, Kevin said, “By the time I am finished my sentence, I won’t be.” Levine also testified that Kevin expressed a desire to stay in the juvenile facility—rather than be sent to an adult prison—“in order to achieve his goals.”
Under cross-examination, Swayze refuted what Levine gave as Kevin’s self-description. When asked what he thought of what the counselor said about Kevin, he answered, “My first reaction is surprise, because it’s different from my direct knowledge of him.” He reiterated his opinion that Kevin was a psychopath, almost certainly incurable and absolutely without the ability to feel either guilt or remorse. Clearly, Swayze thought Kevin was playing Levine and that if he really believed him, Levine was making a dangerous mistake.
Nuttall then read the court a series of affidavits from Sprucedale employees who generally described Kevin as polite and co-operative in custody.
Swayze countered that he wasn’t surprised at all. He said that psychopaths are often the best-behaved prisoners because they know how to manipulate people to get what they want. Kevin really wanted to stay in Sprucedale for six years, rather than face adult prison for at least 10 years and more likely the rest of his life, so Swayze said he was of the opinion that Kevin was affecting remorse to fool his keepers at Sprucedale into thinking he was making psychological progress.
When Levine was brought back to the stand, much of what he said backed up what Swayze had said. He said that Kevin had applied for an intensive behavioral rehabilitation program at Sprucedale, but was denied “because of his emotional detachment and general lack of remorse.”
When asked his own opinion, Levine asserted that he felt Kevin was more suited to an adult prison than a youth facility. One of the reasons he gave was that he would be much older than most of the other inmates at any facility and that could make him liable to bully them.
When Swayze was asked his opinion of Tim, he said he should receive psychiatric treatment for two years in jail followed by at least three years of close supervision in the community. He described Tim as having made significant progress in custody, though he did once try to commit suicide by hanging himself.
Dennis asked Swayze what disorder Tim had. Swayze said he didn’t know. Then, Dennis asked, how did he know what sentence was best to help him?
About a week later, McCombs heard the victim impact statements. The first to go was Joanne. She said:
I really don’t know where to start to explain the depth of my pain I have been feeling for the past 2 1/2ars. My two sons were the reason I enjoyed life.
Kevin slowly began to withdraw from our family and stopped wanting to be involved in family activities and outings, not sure if that was due to his age or the passing of his Nana [grandmother].
It was very hard for me to watch him go through rough times and not be able to help him. It was very painful for me to see him be sad. I wish I had known how to get through to him.
 
I feel that everything inside me is dead. My sons were my pride and joy. There are times when I look outside and see the kids playing and laughing. It’s so hard to swallow because I think that should have been my boys playing and laughing and enjoying life the way it was meant to be enjoyed.
 
You can lose people you love and think that’s painful but the loss of your own child is the deepest painful gut-wrenching feeling that you can ever imagine.
 
I just feel lost. I miss my sons; I miss being a mother; I know I am still a mother but I feel I cannot enjoy life now like other mothers are doing. I feel like I have lost both my children.
 
And if love alone could have saved Johnathon he never would have died. In life I loved him dearly, in death I love him still; in my heart he holds a place that only a mother can feel. It broke my heart to lose him, but he didn’t go alone for half my heart went with him. Every mother dreams for the best for their children and now I have to try and help my eldest son to get the help he needs and to help him recover from this tragedy because I love him, he is all I have left.
 
I will never forget what has happened, but I will work on forgiving him and I hope he will work on forgiving me for not knowing how to fix the problems of growing up and being a teenager, or not being there that fatal day, as maybe he would have talked to me.
 
If Johnathon were here now he would forgive his big brother. In Johnathon’s eyes he was and will always be his big brother. I have to help my oldest son to get the help he needs to recover from this tragedy because I love him.
When she finished, she made a surprising request. She asked McCombs that if Kevin were to be judged an adult, the publication ban preventing the media from identifying Johnathon be removed. McCombs asked why.
“We have not been able to acknowledge Johnathon properly since his death,” she replied. Joanne claimed that since the media storm that surrounded the trial, everyone had concentrated on Johnathon’s death and seemed to have forgotten what he was like when he was alive. She said that if the ban was lifted, she would make a memorial website for Johnathon.
Ralston followed Joanne and spoke not about how he was attacked, but about how much Johnathon’s death had affected him. “I have not been able to find any peace,” he said. “Johnathon was a very special boy. He was a free spirit, a wanderer, and a compassionate, caring child.”
He broke down as he told the court he did everything he could to keep the little boy safe. “But I feel that I failed because I could not keep my son safe in our own home,” he said.
The last to speak was Kevin Madden Sr., the boys’ biological father. He spoke not of missing Johnathon, but instead appealed to McCombs to keep Kevin Jr. out of adult prison. He said that he had visited him at the youth facility and that he was doing well there.
On the final day of testimony, Tim and Kevin were allowed to plead their own cases before sentencing. Tim went first. He reminded the court that he did not take an active part in Johnathon’s killing, but instead watched in horror as Kevin hacked him to death.
Tim then offered Joanne his apologies, then said he wished the whole thing had never happened. “Although I only met Johnathon once or twice, I could tell he was a very sweet young boy and he didn’t deserve what happened to him,” Tim said. “And for me to have taken part in what happened that day, I’m very, very sorry.”
Joanne burst into tears.
Goody recommended that Tim be sentenced as an adult, but spend the rest of his custody in Syl Apps. He asked the judge to sentence Tim to spend two more years in the facility—where he was receiving daily treatments—and another three years of supervision once he rejoins the community.
He called Tim an “underachieving youth,” who was a “constant truant, petty thief and vandal.” Tim idolized Kevin because he had the boldness Tim himself lacked. While he admitted the boy was “ultimately salvageable,” he said that he was a long way from being a contributing member of society and wouldn’t get anywhere unless he received professional treatment in an institutional facility.
Dennis countered by saying that Tim had no idea that Kevin was going to murder anyone the day he called Ashley. He said that Tim has long been “deeply ashamed of his cowardly behavior” in not doing anything to stop Kevin from killing his little brother.
“Mr. Ferriman didn’t have the guts to step in and stop this when he could,” David Harris, Dennis’s co-counsel added. “Remember, though, that he was a 15-year-old at the time.”
Dennis also pointed out that all reports indicated that Tim had made significant progress during his stay at Syl Apps. He asked McCombs to release Tim from the facility, but to continue his rehabilitation and supervision once outside.
Kevin waived his right to speak before the court.
Goody said that Kevin should be sent to an adult prison and that, if he should ever get out of prison, he should be under constant supervision. “The egregious nature of Kevin’s behavior is of critical importance,” he told McCombs, “because it informs us how seriously he is disturbed and how much he needs treatment.”
BOOK: Rage
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