Pubdate: Wed, 07 Oct 2009 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2009 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/regina/leaderpost/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Barb Pacholik, Staff Writer INTENT TO COMMIT MURDER UNLIKELY: REPORT A Saskatchewan psychiatrist says when convicted murderer Kim Joseph Walker fired 10 shots at his daughter's drug dealer boyfriend, hitting him five times, the Yorkton father likely didn't intend to kill his victim. In a report filed with the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal as part of Walker's bid to overturn his second-degree murder conviction, Dr. Robin Menzies said Walker was in a "dissociative state" -- an abnormal state of consciousness -- when he killed Jason Hayward on March 17, 2003. Released from a psychiatric ward that day, Walker's then 16-year-old, morphine-addicted daughter Jadah returned to Hayward, her live-in boyfriend and fellow addict who supplied her drugs. Upon learning of her return, Walker took a pistol and 30 rounds of ammunition from his basement, drove to Hayward's house, pushed his daughter out of the way, and fired at the 24-year-old man. "During such a state, it is quite likely that Walker did not form any specific intent to kill the victim," Menzies said in his report. To be convicted of murder, an accused must have intended to cause death or to cause bodily harm, knowing it is likely to cause death Menzies' report is part of a "fresh evidence" application defence lawyer Balfour Der hopes will help get Walker a new trial. The Crown takes issue with the report and was allowed to cross-examine Menzies before the appeal court Wednesday. The full appeal arguments, including whether or not the new evidence will be admitted, will be heard at a date still to be set. For three and a half hours, director of appeals Dean Sinclair grilled Menzies, a Saskatoon psychiatrist who has testified for both the Crown and defence in several high-profile cases. Convicted by a jury in January 2007, Walker, 52, is currently serving a life sentence without parole eligibility for 10 years. Menzies said Walker's dissociative state was triggered upon learning Jadah had returned to Hayward, coupled with a phone call in which Hayward allegedly told Walker he would "make (Jadah) disappear." The doctor said Walker's mental state is reflected in his having only "flashes" of memory of the shooting. He also told Menzies he felt "numb, detached. It was like a movie, sort of" when he got to the victim's house. But Sinclair wondered how Menzies could be certain Walker wasn't lying about his amnesia. Menzies said Walker's account had a "ring of authenticity." His opinion was based on two interviews with Walker, an interview with his wife, and a review of documents supplied by the defence. But Sinclair suggested Menzies had an incomplete picture. For example, the doctor didn't have a police statement in which Jadah stated that before shooting Hayward, her father said: "This is so you can't kill my daughter." After the shooting, Walker said, "I'm insane. I'm insane," Jadah told police. Sinclair also noted a few days before the killing, a witness heard Walker say "he would just love to blow James's head off," and Walker's wife respond, "just plead insanity." Menzies said to suggest someone would deliberately tell a witness he was going to claim insanity, not actually use the defence at trial, sit in a prison for three years, then only raise a mental health issue on appeal -- "that's insane." Questioned repeatedly about details from the case, Menzies said more information is helpful, but his opinion is unchanged. "It's still my opinion. None of us will ever know if Walker is lying," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr