Mother of man seeking NCR defence for murder was ‘scared’ to go into son’s apartment

The mother of a Toronto man who has admitted to killing two strangers over two days April 2022 took the stand at her son’s first-degree murder trial Thursday and said she was “a little bit scared” of her son because of the way he acted.
Richard Edwin was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 2010 when he was 28. Now 43, he has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder arguing he’s not criminally responsible (NCR) due to a mental disorder that rendered him incapable of knowing the wrongfulness of his actions.
On the stand Thursday, Edwin’s mother Carmen Campbell said she first noticed her son was acting differently when he was in his twenties.
“He was very nervous and agitated. He registered to go to Humber College but he wasn’t able to go,” said Campbell.
Campbell recalled one incident when her son was living with her for a few months around 2010 and he appeared very agitated and told his mother he was hearing voices. She said he called police to report it. Campbell said she took her son to a medical doctor, a doctor she was told “could see in the spirit.”
“Because he was an adult, they didn’t discuss the results with me. They gave him a prescription but he didn’t fill it. I think it was for a psychotic drug,” Campbell explained.
She said she later learned her son had seen a doctor in Ottawa, where he had lived with his father, who diagnosed him with schizophrenia.
Campbell who worked at Seaton House in downtown Toronto from 2002-2019, a shelter for people who are homeless, said she had frequent interactions with people suffering from mental health issues. She testified some time after he told her about hearing voices, she asked him if he was hearing them anymore, and he said no.
She said Edwin lived with her temporarily between residences explaining he lived in an apartment on Sherbourne Street near Dundas Street, which he shared before moving to the bachelor apartment on Spadina Road where he was arrested on April 10, 2022.
Edwin has admitted that on the afternoon of April 7, 2022, he took the TTC to Sherbourne subway station where he shot 21-year-old Kartik Vasudev multiple times before running off. Vasudev was a stranger and the two had no interaction prior to the shooting.

He has also admitted that two days later, on April 9, 2022, he took the TTC to Queen subway station before shooting 35-year-old Elijah Mahepath in the back from behind, before running off.
Campbell said she visited Edwin at least three times after he moved to the Spadina apartment, calling it a little dark room in the basement. She testified she didn’t like to go inside, instead would stay by the door.

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“I was a little bit scared to go there because he was acting so paranoid and I had heard in the news that one child had attacked and killed his mother in Scarborough,” she said.
“In the back of my mind, I was a bit scared to go in. I would let him come outside and when he came outside, he would look around as if somebody’s following him.”
Campbell also described how she noticed Edwin had developed a pronounced stutter explaining he would gasp as he was trying to speak. She said she didn’t want to ask him if he was okay.
“I didn’t want to get him upset. I would ask his father to talk to him to find out what was going on,” Campbell added.
Campbell explained he really didn’t work.
“At one point, he was selling some Muslim newsletters on the street and people would give him donations,” she said.
She said the last time she saw Edwin was in January 2020 when they were celebrating her birthday. Campbell said they went out for lunch at a fish-and-chip restaurant on Weston Road near her apartment.
“He was just looking around. Paranoid type of behaviour,” she explained. Campbell also said it was hard for him to communicate because of his stutter, which he didn’t have as a child.
Campbell said after the luncheon, she was helping Edwin looking for an apartment.
“He said he had an application he wanted to fill out to get a license for a gun. I said, ‘What do you need that for?’ I wasn’t going to fill it out. I never heard anything after that,” she explained.
According to an agreed statement of facts, Edwin was a registered gun owner who owned five firearms including a 9 mm Luger calibre Smith & Wesson semi-automatic pistol used in the shootings of Vasudev and Mahepath. The serial number of the pistol was obfuscated when it was seized from Edwin’s apartment.
Campbell also described one visit her son made to her apartment on the 19th floor.
“He wanted to go out on the balcony and I was very scared,” she said.
“I was thinking what if he goes out there and jumps over. I prayed he come in fast but there was no incident. I didn’t think he was in his right mind because of the way he would be looking around and staring and stuff like that.”
During cross-examination, assistant crown attorney Sandra Duffey asked Campbell how many times she had spoken to Edwin between January 2020 when the two had lunch and April 2022. She explained they had spoken once and texted once or maybe texted twice.
“At any point, do you remember having a conversation with your son about him wanting to move to Jamaica? At any point during the conversations with your son, Richard never spoke about white supremacists or any problems about anti-black racism?” said Duffey, referring to a report prepared by forensic psychiatrist Dr. Lisa Ramshaw, who was retained by the defence to assess Edwin for criminal responsibility.
Campbell replied no.
Duffey also told Campbell, Ramshaw said Edwin was pre-occupied with white supremacists, which Campbell denied knowing.
“Would it surprise you to know your son reported he smoke a lot of weed in high school?” said Duffey. Campbell answered she had never heard that before nor Duffey’s suggestion from Ramshaw’s report that Edwin reported using cannabis every other day and only stopped in 2015 or 2016.
Ramshaw is expected to testify next week that based on her assessment, Edwin qualifies for the NCR defence.
Duffey also asked Campbell about a text message from Edwin received on April 6, 2022, just one day before Vasudev was shot and killed. The text message which was shown in court was received just days after Campbell returned from an extended stay in Jamaica.
The message from Edwin to his mother read, “Be mindful when on the road mom. A lot of angry drivers now in Canada.” Duffey said in Ramshaw’s report after meeting with Campbell, Ramshaw wrote “She (Campbell) did not know what he meant though he had never said anything like that before.”
Duffey suggested to Campbell that it was not a change of behaviour for Edwin. “It was not a concern to me,” she replied.
“I’m going to suggest to you, when Dr. Ramshaw was asking you about your son’s behaviour, you were trying to find examples of a change of behaviour,” said Duffey.
Campbell replied, “No that’s not true because I wasn’t in contact with him.”
Duffey also pointed out that Campbell never mentioned to Ramshaw that she was afraid her son might jump off her balcony.
“What was in the back of my mind. If someone has mental issues, I was a bit scared that he wanted to go on the balcony to see what was it like. That was my own fear. Not like he was acting like he was going to do that.”
Mahepath’s aunt, uncle and sister attended the trial for the first time in person on Thursday. His aunt said Mahepath was on his way home from shopping when “somebody just shot him in the back”.
“It’s very stressful, just seeing him,” Monica Gonsalves said about seeing Edwin in the courtroom.
Gonsalves said Mathepath, one of four children moved to Canada from Trinidad at the age of 14.
“I hope the court considers all the evidence and justice will prevail.”
The trial continues.


The union representing workers at a shuttered Brampton, Ont., auto assembly plant has blasted the decision to move 3,000 jobs to the United States as “an egregious violation” of the agreement the company signed.
A fiery statement from Unifor, published Friday, lambasted Stellantis for moving Jeep production out of Ontario and into the United States, accusing the company of breaking its agreement with thousands of workers.
“Stellantis’ actions are appalling,” the statement said.
“Since February 2025, when the company first notified the union of delays in Brampton Assembly Plant retooling and J4U program implementation, Unifor sought clarity on the company’s reasons, as well as timelines for work to restart. For 8 months, company representatives reassured us that the vehicle commitment to Brampton was unchanged.”
The announcement came earlier this week, when Stellantis unveiled a $13-billion investment in the United States amidst tariffs.
The federal government has threatened the company with legal action. It is currently in line to receive large subsidies from both the provincial and federal governments.

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Prime Minister Mark Carney said Thursday that the global head of Stellantis told him the automaker is looking at finding a new model to fill the idled Brampton plant, but that a decision would require more trade certainty.
“They’re looking at different models being produced in Brampton. That decision would be taken in the context of the finalization of the USMCA,” he told reporters.
Unifor, however, said it had not been given any indication that Stellantis was proceeding with the plan and demanded certainty for local jobs.
“To be clear, Unifor has not been notified of any alternative plans for production at Brampton. There is no reason to treat these public statements as credible, or reliable,” the statement continued.
“And further, the federal government is not the legal bargaining agent for Brampton Assembly Plant workers. Any future conversations about the future of Brampton Assembly Plant must include Unifor.”
Unifor is the country’s largest private sector union, and also represents staff working at Global News.
Stellantis had been in the middle of retooling its Brampton plant to assemble new vehicles earlier this year. It paused that work in the face of U.S. President Donald Trump’s auto tariffs.
Now, the Jeep Compass — which was slated to be made in Brampton — will be made in Belvidere, Ill.
The company stressed in a statement that it remained committed to Canadian jobs and hinted it could find a future for its Brampton operation.
“Canada is very important to us,” the company said. “We have plans for Brampton and will share them upon further discussions with the Canadian government.”
Unifor said it was not satisfied with the statements.
“Stellantis’ actions this week are a blackmark on the company’s 100-year history of automaking in Canada,” the union wrote. “The company has betrayed the union’s trust, the trust of its workforce, and of all Canadians. This behaviour will not be tolerated by Unifor.”
Stellantis’ $13 billion announcement involves producing vehicles in Illinois, Ohio, Michigan and Indiana, and reduces its focus on electrification.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

A Halifax pilot and longtime Blue Jays fan has taken his support for Canada’s baseball team to new heights — literally — tracing the team’s logo through the skies over Nova Scotia.
“I wanted to cheer on the Blue Jays, I wanted to cheer the fans, I wanted to do it for myself,” said Dimitri Neonakis.
The two-and-a-half-hour trip, Neonakis says, took about three hours to plan and map out before he took off from Halifax Stanfield International Airport at 11:27 a.m. local time Tuesday.
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He began by outlining the maple leaf — the trickiest part, he says — before carefully tracing the bird in the team’s logo with his Cirrus SR22 aircraft. His route stretched roughly 570 kilometres, looping from Halifax to the town of Debert and back.

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While still in the air tracing the bird, Neonakis says someone messaged to ask if he was the one behind the drawing.
“I said, ‘I’m a big fan. Of course I did,” he said with a laugh.
The pilot of 27 years says this flight path has drawn more attention than most online, but it isn’t his first of its kind.
He says he has completed nearly 30 of these “sky drawings,” some in support of missing children or to honour people such as George Floyd, Terry Fox and Jennifer Casey, the Snowbirds member killed in a 2020 crash.
Occasionally, like with the Jays, he takes to the air for fun — sketching hearts, holiday greetings or Father’s Day wishes.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 17, 2025.
© 2025 The Canadian Press

Toronto Public Health is developing a wastewater surveillance program to detect the spread of diseases during the FIFA World Cup.
Toronto’s new Medical Officer of Health Dr. Michelle Murti said the pilot will collect sewage samples in areas where fans congregate and test them to detect diseases, such as COVID-19, influenza and RSV.
Murti said the public health unit is looking into whether other illnesses, such as measles, could also be monitored in wastewater given the large international audience that will be congregating in Toronto next summer.
“It’ll just be one more piece of information that we have as part of a larger suite of information that we’re looking at to make sure that we’re keeping people safe and healthy through the games,” Murti said.
The city has said it expects 300,000 out-of-town visitors in Toronto over the course of six World Cup matches starting in June.
Ontario’s COVID-19 wastewater surveillance program, which provided a close to real-time way to track the prevalence of the virus before people showed symptoms during the pandemic, ended last year.

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Dr. Fahad Razak, an internal medicine specialist at St. Michael’s Hospital, said applying this technology to a large scale event like the World Cup is an innovative approach to fill the gap left since the provincial program concluded.
Razak said that program should have been sustained and the disease detection potential of the technology should have been explored beyond COVID-19.
For example, Windsor-Essex County used wastewater surveillance earlier this year to detect a rise in measles infections within the region.
“Measles is a very good example because it is an illness that is so transmissible. If you have a high pocket of unprotected people and you have the emergence of the measles signal within that area, that’s an area where you’d want to do your best from a public health perspective to try and prevent spread,” Razak said.
Razak said wastewater could also be used for opioid surveillance to detect a contaminated drug supply during the World Cup.
“The idea here is – can you use it to make decisions and to intervene in a way that saves people’s lives or reduces illness? That’s the critical question.”
Dr. Lawrence Goodridge, co-lead of the Guelph Wastewater Epidemiology Lab for Public Health, said the province’s decision to end its wastewater program, which monitored 75 per cent of the population, has necessitated smaller scale programs like this one.
The pilot will be useful if a major outbreak spreads at the games, but the drawback is that the reach is limited, he said.
“People are going to be moving around, they’re coming into Toronto, but they’re also going to be moving around through the province for the World Cup,” Goodridge said.
Toronto’s top doctor said the pilot will help determine the value of wastewater surveillance for future large-scale events in the city.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
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