BURNABY (NEWS1130) – A coroner’s inquest into the death of a BC woman whose house was burned down by her mentally ill son has heard there was little communication between health professionals and the police.
That meant mental health experts with the power to decided whether 23-year-old Blake Salemink should be out in the community did not know he had assaulted and threatened his 59-year-old mother.
Colette Marie Salemink died in April 2010 when her son burnt down her home in Coquitlam. Blake Salemink, who has a combination of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, was later determined to be not criminally responsible because of his mental illness.
A coroner’s inquest has heard Blake, who was on extended leave from a psychiatric hospital, assaulted his mother in November of 2009 and threatened to kill her days before the fire. But the man’s psychiatrist, Dr. Roham Ramsundhar, says he didn’t know about either incident, and if he did, he would have had Blake brought in to re-assess his release conditions.
Inquest hears of poor communication before fatal arson
Mental health experts did not know Blake Salemink assaulted his mother
News1130 Staff/The Canadian Press
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