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  #3601  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2025, 8:12 PM
jollyburger jollyburger is online now
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Are we taking bets he does something stupid the next time he gets released?

Quote:
Accused in Chinatown triple stabbing says he was ‘prompted by God’

The man accused of stabbing three people at a festival in Vancouver’s Chinatown two years ago told a B.C. court he believed God had directed him to do so.

Blair Donnelly has pleaded not guilty to three counts of aggravated assault in the Sept. 10, 2023 attack at the Light Up Chinatown festival that saw two women stabbed in the back and one man slashed in the arm.

Donnelly was on an unescorted day pass from the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital in Coquitlam, better known as Colony Farm, at the time.

Taking the stand in his own defence on Tuesday, Donnelly brought his own bible to court.

Donnelly has admitted to the stabbings, and his lawyer, Glen Orris, told the judge-only trial that the relevant factor in the incident was his client’s mental state at the time.

Orris said Donnelly’s personal belief in and connection with God were of key significance, and that evidence shows his complete commitment to that belief, what doctors have called “his obsession.”

The court heard that Donnelly “met Christ” at age 22, what he described as a born-again experience that turned him away from a life of drugs and partying and towards marriage and fatherhood.

That same belief, however, later drove him to violence, the court heard.

'I was prompted by God to hurt somebody'
Donnelly testified he’d left the facility on an e-bike intending to go to a Coquitlam coffee shop on the day of the attack, but changed his mind because of “a belief I was being prompted by God to go to Chinatown.”

He proceeded to Home Depot, where the Crown has said Donnelly bought a chisel used in the stabbing attack.

“I went there to get some type of instrument I needed something to hurt somebody with,” Donnelly testified.

“I believe I was prompted by God to hurt somebody that day.”

He told the court he believes God helped him pick out the chisel, which was “compact, wasn’t too abrasive to really cut somebody.”

He then proceeded to the Braid SkyTrain station, where he took transit to Chinatown.

Donnelly testified he walked his bike to a green space near the festival, then sat down to decide what to do when he saw some signs, including one for a the Chinese Canadian friendship centre.

He said that reminded him of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, two Canadians who spent three years in detention in China.

“At that point in time, I felt I was where God wanted me to be,” he testified. “I believe the Holy Spirit was leading me to hurt somebody.”

The court heard Donnelly wandered among the crowd, and believed that if he hurt someone that “the Chinese authorities” would come and arrest him.

“I approached the three individuals that I hurt, stabbed two of them, attempted to stab the third person. The third person maneuvered himself away from me and fell,” he said.

He added that he had no animosity towards Chinese people, and that he stabbed each person only once because he wanted to hurt them, but not kill them.

He told the court he fled the scene because he knew what he had one was wrong, and that he had broken the law.

History of delusions
The Chinatown attack would not be the first time Donnelly had acted violently based on delusions.

In 2006, Donnelly stabbed his 16-year-old daughter to death while acting on religious delusions. He had originally intended to kill his wife, but changed his mind in response to a delusional belief that it was his daughter that God wanted him to kill, according to the BC Review Board.

Donnelly was ultimately found to be not criminally responsible by reason of mental disorder (NCRMD), a ruling that led to him being held in custody at the Colony Farm facility.

On Tuesday, Donnelly addressed the killing in court.

“I got really sick. I took my daughter’s life,” he told the court.

Donnelly told the court he couldn’t remember what he was thinking at the time, but that he recalled going to the kitchen, getting a knife, and stabbing the girl while she was lying on the couch.

“I loved her — I’ve no idea why I would have done that. I loved her,” he told the court.

“You regret that now obviously?” Orris asked.

“Yes,” Donnelly replied.

On Monday, Crown prosecutor Mark Myhre told the court there was no dispute about whether Donnelly had stabbed the victims, and that the case would hinge on whether he was was criminally liable, or whether he was NCRMD.

Myhre said the “live issues” to be determined at trial are not whether Donnelly has a mental illness, which he does, but whether he “was suffering from the illness on that day.”

A report commissioned after the attack found that Donnelly had been allowed out of Colony Farm on day passes 99 times without incident, but that an incident like the Chinatown attack was “more likely to occur at some point than not.”

It also highlighted Donnelly’s history of violence, including how he stabbed another man while on an unescorted day pass in 2009, and how he attempted to assault another patient at Colony Farm in 2017. He was convicted of assault in the first incident, and found NCRMD in the second.
https://globalnews.ca/news/11405090/blair-donnelly-testifies-god/
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  #3602  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2025, 8:33 PM
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This thread makes no sense being in an urban affairs and development forum. It’s basically a spot where people post stories on crime.
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  #3603  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2025, 8:46 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by logan5 View Post
This thread makes no sense being in an urban affairs and development forum. It’s basically a spot where people post stories on crime.
Because if there is no commentary on it, the problem will just magically go away! Along with it's corrosive effect on urbanism.

Too many Vancouverites are inured the problem and like to pretend it doesn't exist. I was in Gastown last night (it's rare and I remembered why after being there). So many junkies slumped around. I watched two couples who were obviously tourists and were horrified by the spectacle. And this is in one of the places we "sell" to tourists as as must-see in Vancouver.
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  #3604  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2025, 9:35 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by logan5 View Post
This thread makes no sense being in an urban affairs and development forum. It’s basically a spot where people post stories on crime.
No logan5, we don't post stories on crime, that would be glorifying, we post our concerns of the city we love and want other to love also.
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  #3605  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2025, 9:38 PM
jollyburger jollyburger is online now
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Quote:
Originally Posted by logan5 View Post
This thread makes no sense being in an urban affairs and development forum. It’s basically a spot where people post stories on crime.
Not much different than covering politics, retail or restaurants on SSP.
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  #3606  
Old Posted Sep 10, 2025, 9:46 PM
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And on jollyburger's concern, I trust no one with a godsend in a sane or psychotic mind.
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  #3607  
Old Posted Sep 11, 2025, 12:49 AM
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This was the topic on CKNW yesterday morning about the crime rate being lower, one of the comments that came into the show was a woman who worked down there and she said she definately felt a difference in the area and was quite happy with the change but she said she felt like Granville Street has become a no-go zone for her now as she says its awful and avoids it. A few other people who live or work in the DTES area shared the same thing that the DTES felt different and better since this program started.

This popped up on my YouTube yesterday about how bad crime in Melbourne has gotten.

Video Link
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  #3608  
Old Posted Sep 11, 2025, 12:54 AM
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Originally Posted by whatnext View Post
Because if there is no commentary on it, the problem will just magically go away! Along with it's corrosive effect on urbanism.

Too many Vancouverites are inured the problem and like to pretend it doesn't exist. I was in Gastown last night (it's rare and I remembered why after being there). So many junkies slumped around. I watched two couples who were obviously tourists and were horrified by the spectacle. And this is in one of the places we "sell" to tourists as as must-see in Vancouver.
I was thinking about this yesterday after it being talked about on the radio. The stats say more people say its less scary, But how does ones idea of what is scary compare to someone elses.

I feel for myself that I've become immune to seeing people slumped over or sitting there with needles still in their arms etc. or huddling on the ground or people with their bags dumped out all over the sidewalk while they start to do their drugs. Anyway I can see how others would say its scary, it can be unpleasant but you kinda just get used to it and its quite sad to just have to walk through it and see it all the time. I am in Surrey and I see the bent over people all the time and its just kind of become normal. and almost to the point where you don't notice it, its kinda weird.
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  #3609  
Old Posted Sep 14, 2025, 9:40 PM
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More details on the woman attacked by the urine guy. Sounds like she did resist as did nearby witnesses. Scary the strength some of these whackjobs have.

Vancouver woman robbed of empathy after vicious attack by naked man
Amir Ali
Sep 12 2025, 9:50 am

Last week, a woman was brutally attacked by a naked man in Vancouver, and the incident was so vicious that she didn’t even realize the man had urinated on her until after it was over…

… I’m walking down the street and get around the truck and there’s this guy naked on top of a car,” she told Daily Hive.

“He started yelling at me.”

…She ran up to another man who was in front of her and asked for help. He answered her call for assistance and told the naked individual to back off. The bystander yelled at Tekarra to get away from the area.…

…. She started running down the street, and the next thing she remembers was being on the ground with the man on top of her while she screamed for help.

She recalls someone else yelling, and she looked up to see someone running across Pender toward her. The original bystander who tried to help got involved again and was trying to pull the attacker off. The second bystander started trying to hit the suspect, yelling at him to get off Tekarra…..


https://dailyhive.com/vancouver/vancouver-woman-attack-naked-man-empathy
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  #3610  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2025, 9:55 PM
kikin kikin is offline
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that is so brutal and so maddening

sad thing if her boyfriend had dealt with that criminal the way he deserved he would be in trouble

we need some serious change in the way we let governments get away with this by not having any consequences at the polls

Last edited by kikin; Sep 16, 2025 at 7:23 PM.
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  #3611  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 12:52 PM
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  #3612  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 7:37 PM
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That is a great policy Sportchek has, I'll have to apply for a job there.
Payed minimum wage and you can let customers take what they want for free and walk out the door unimpeded.
I would invited all my friends to come and shop on my shift and get a cut off the sale of stolen merchandise on eBay.
I know Sportchek's policy is for employee safety and not to be sued by the bad guy if they get hurt trying to steel but it's getting ridiculous.
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  #3613  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 7:49 PM
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Violent crime is at a 20 year low. Livability in this city is not actually declining.
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  #3614  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 8:12 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by logan5 View Post
Violent crime is at a 20 year low. Livability in this city is not actually declining.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Zepfancouver View Post
That is good news, I like it, keep it going, and maybe before you know it, we will start a new SSP thread ' Public Order & the Rise of Vancouver's Livability '
logan5 you are free to start a new thread
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  #3615  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 8:46 PM
cganuelas1995 cganuelas1995 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by logan5 View Post
Violent crime is at a 20 year low. Livability in this city is not actually declining.
Reported or total?
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  #3616  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 8:49 PM
cganuelas1995 cganuelas1995 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Zepfancouver View Post
That is a great policy Sportchek has, I'll have to apply for a job there.
Payed minimum wage and you can let customers take what they want for free and walk out the door unimpeded.
I would invited all my friends to come and shop on my shift and get a cut off the sale of stolen merchandise on eBay.
I know Sportchek's policy is for employee safety and not to be sued by the bad guy if they get hurt trying to steel but it's getting ridiculous.
Same on public transit too. Could probably get free taxi rides that way too, I doubt the drivers wanna get sued/fired/assaulted.

Coming home some guy just pushed through the disabled gates at Burrard. I reckon there is also an "observe and report only" policy with the attendants.
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  #3617  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 9:04 PM
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Originally Posted by logan5 View Post
Violent crime is at a 20 year low. Livability in this city is not actually declining.
I think most people in this thread have experienced the decline of Gastown. I used to work in the strip of East Hastings between Victory Park and Abbott and all the small businesses there have been completely destroyed. I remember Woodwards being not sketchy at all and people playing basketball in the atrium. Last time I went, admittedly this was a year ago, some rough looking people with a pitbull were at the entrance and I decided against going to the London Drugs there.

The officially reported statistics don't reflect any of this though. They also don't convey the amount of businesses that have been driven out of the DTES. Many people have different opinions on why this is the case, I'm sure you do too. But as said before, if you've been in Vancouver for any amount of time there's been clear decline in livability especially in the DTES and to argue otherwise would be disingenuous.
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  #3618  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 9:22 PM
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Originally Posted by cganuelas1995 View Post

Same on public transit too. Could probably get free taxi rides that way too, I doubt the drivers wanna get sued/fired/assaulted.

Coming home some guy just pushed through the disabled gates at Burrard. I reckon there is also an "observe and report only" policy with the attendants.
Yeah, I remember a few years back the problem of bus drivers being assaulted by short change or non paying riders, then they put in plexiglass barriers for the driver.
Not sure if all buses today are fitted, but if the bus is not fitted, it's a free ride because the driver wont argue.
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  #3619  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 9:25 PM
kikin kikin is offline
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Originally Posted by Zepfancouver View Post
That is a great policy Sportchek has, I'll have to apply for a job there.
Payed minimum wage and you can let customers take what they want for free and walk out the door unimpeded.
I would invited all my friends to come and shop on my shift and get a cut off the sale of stolen merchandise on eBay.
I know Sportchek's policy is for employee safety and not to be sued by the bad guy if they get hurt trying to steel but it's getting ridiculous.
it is strange because I often see police arresting shoplifters at the Lululemon a couple of blocks down on Robson, is it a management choice?
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  #3620  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2025, 9:35 PM
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Originally Posted by blippo View Post
I think most people in this thread have...
I agree with blippo...And if I or anyone from the SSP community gets mugged on the street of Vancouver, we would not take any confort in statistics of year low or increase in livability.
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