Man who stabbed 3 at Vancouver Chinatown festival found not criminally responsible
VANCOUVER — A man accused of aggravated assault for stabbing three people at a Vancouver Chinatown festival, in an attack that prompted debate over the handling of some psychiatric patients, has been found not criminally responsible due to a mental disorder.
B.C. Supreme Court Justice Eric Gottardi said Friday that the court doesn’t convict people of crimes for being sick.
The trial heard that Blair Donnelly, 66, had asked the Holy Spirit for a sign not to carry out the stabbings in September of 2023, but he didn’t get one and carried on with the attack because he “wanted to obey God.”
At a trial that wrapped last month, Donnelly testified he had initially planned to cycle to a coffee shop in Coquitlam on the day of the attack, but felt “prompted by God to go to Chinatown.”


