Woman accused of killing 3 people fit to stand trial, court rules

A Toronto woman accused of killing three people in three Ontario cities over three days last year is fit to stand trial, a court ruled Wednesday.
Sabrina Kauldhar faces one count of first-degree murder and two counts of second-degree murder. The charges relate to three deaths police have said took place over three consecutive days in Toronto, Niagara Falls and Hamilton in early October.
In March, a judge ruled that Kauldhar was unfit to stand trial at that time, after the prosecution requested a psychological assessment.
Defence lawyers had initially asked for the assessment, but withdrew their application saying Kauldhar had instructed them to oppose it.
After being found unfit, she was ordered into a 60-day psychiatric treatment.

Get daily National news
Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
Kauldhar’s lawyers argued following Kauldhar’s reassessment that the Crown has not met its burden to prove it is more likely than not that the accused has the “psychological wherewithal to meet the test for fitness,” a judge for the Ontario Court of Justice said Wednesday.
But Justice Russell Silverstein said he took into consideration the opinions of medical experts from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health who observed Kauldhar before making his decision.
“It stands to reason that if most of the symptoms of the defendant’s mental illness have resolved through treatment, it is also likely that her unfitness to stand trial, another earlier symptom of her illness, has also resolved,” he said in a Toronto courtroom Wednesday.
He ultimately ruled that Kauldhar would be fit to stand trial.
Kauldhar was arrested and charged in the three killings in early October.
Toronto police found a woman dead in the city’s west end on Oct. 1. Investigators identified the victim as 66-year-old Trinh Thi Vu, and have said she and Kauldhar knew each other but did not provide details on their relationship.
The following day, emergency officials responded to a park in Niagara Falls for a reported disturbance and found 47-year-old Lance Cunningham critically injured. He later died at the scene, police said.
On Oct. 3, Hamilton police said they found an unresponsive, injured man in a parking lot who later died in hospital. They identified him as 77-year-old Mario Bilich, and said he was found with stab wounds.
Police said Kauldhar was arrested in Burlington later that day.
Investigators have said they believe Cunningham and Bilich were randomly attacked.
Kauldhar is scheduled to appear in court again next month.
© 2025 The Canadian Press


An eight-month joint-forces investigation has led to the seizure of 72 illegal handguns and dozens of prohibited devices, with two men from Brampton, Ont., now facing serious weapons trafficking charges.
The investigation, originally focused on alleged cocaine trafficking, led to the discovery of the handguns. when OPP officers intercepted a northbound tractor-trailer near Temiskaming Shores.
The truck, originating in Toronto, was stopped at a Ministry of Transportation inspection station.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
With support from multiple OPP units including the Organized Crime Enforcement Bureau, the Guns and Gangs Enforcement Team, the Northeast Region Community Street Crime Units, the Canine Unit, and Temiskaming OPP, a search warrant was executed on the vehicle.
Officers seized 72 illegal handguns and 66 prohibited devices.
Early tracing suggests all the firearms originated in the United States.
“These firearms originated in the United States, highlighting the importance of partnerships with law enforcement agencies across borders. Thanks to the dedication of our officers and partners, we’ve disrupted a significant criminal operation and taken dangerous weapons out of circulation,” said OPP Chief Supt. Mike Stoddart.
As a result of the investigation, two Brampton men have been charged with 72 counts of weapons trafficking and possession for the purpose of trafficking cocaine.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Toronto police have charged two additional teenage boys in connection with the fatal stabbing of 14-year-old Abdoul Aziz Sarr, who was killed in July outside a fast-food restaurant in the city’s east end.
Both suspects, a 16-year-old and a 17-year-old from Toronto, were arrested on Friday, Oct. 17, and each charged with first-degree murder. Two of them turned themselves in to police in July, while the third turned himself in to police in August.
They were set to make their first court appearance Saturday, Oct. 18, at the Toronto Regional Bail Centre.
Under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, the identities of the accused cannot be released.
Sarr was fatally stabbed on the night of July 5, 2025. Emergency crews were called to the area of Eastern Avenue and Woodward Avenue shortly after 10 p.m., where they found the teen with life-threatening injuries.
He was transported to hospital but later died.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
In a statement following the arrest, a religious centre, where Sarr was a student, remembered him as a beloved and positive presence in their community.
“Abdoul Aziz was more than just a student, he was a light in our lives,” the statement from Mecca Islamic Centre read.
“He greeted everyone with kindness and carried himself with a grace far beyond his years. His loss has shattered our hearts.”
The centre has launched a fundraiser to support the Sarr family with funeral costs, counselling, and other expenses.
A third youth was previously arrested and charged in the case.
All three accused remain before the courts as the investigation continues.
Anyone with additional information is urged to contact Toronto police.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

TORONTO – Eight-year-old Logan Dorna is cheering on the Blue Jays in their playoff run while sporting their logo on his prosthetic eye.
Logan’s left eye was removed at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto after he was diagnosed with retinoblastoma — an eye cancer — when he was six months old.
Matthew Milne, an ocularist who works with the hospital’s eye cancer team, made Logan’s first artificial eye as a baby and replaces it with a new one about every two years as he grows up.
When Logan came to see Milne a couple of weeks ago for his next prosthetic eye, he had something specific in mind.
“I wanted to get the special eye because I like playing baseball and I like watching it too,” he said in a video interview with his parents from their home in Richmond Hill, Ont., on Friday.
Milne, who hand-paints the artificial eyes, made Logan one with a gold iris and baseball seams.
He painted the Blue Jays logo on top of the eye. Unlike the gold and the seams, it’s not possible to make the logo visible to others because the top is tucked back into the eye socket.
Related Videos
But Logan knows it’s there and can show others when he swaps that eye out for a second “everyday” prosthetic eye. That one has a brown iris to match his seeing eye.

Get weekly health news
Receive the latest medical news and health information delivered to you every Sunday.
It also has a special painting on the top that reflects his interests: a character from the “Zelda” video game series.
Milne encourages his young patients to pick fun images for the tops of their prosthetic eyes.
“When you’re dealing with a very kind of adult issue like retinoblastoma, I want to always give kids the opportunity to kind of customize something for themselves, make it fun for them,” he said.
Logan’s mom, Taline Dorna, said her son has been wearing his Blue Jays eye “every time the Jays have been playing because he believes in his soul that it’s giving them a little bit of extra luck.”
The sports theme is also a celebration of how much Logan overcame in the summer when he started playing baseball for the very first time, she said.
“Having just monocular vision, depth perception is really off. So whenever he hit that ball … (it) really gave him that boost of confidence.”
When he’s not batting — Logan’s favourite part of the game — he’s “usually right field but sometimes middle and left,” he said.
Dorna and Logan’s father, Serge, hope that their son’s embracing of his artificial eye inspires other children with differences to feel proud and be welcomed.
“That’s what we’ve always wanted for him … no social stigma attached to having a prosthetic eye because it is such a visible difference,” Dorna said.
“We want him to always feel confident and not ashamed of who he is because it’s part of his identity.”
Logan’s prosthetic eye is connected to ocular muscles so it can move in sync with his seeing eye when he’s looking around, even though there’s no vision there, Milne said.
Retinoblastoma is rare — there were 15 cases in children 14 years and under in 2019 — but it’s the most common type of eye cancer in children and often found under the age of two, according to the Canadian Cancer Society’s website.
Removing the cancerous eye helps prevent the tumour from spreading elsewhere. After Logan’s eye was taken out, he didn’t need any further treatment such as chemotherapy or radiation, his mother said.
He now goes for checkups at SickKids’ eye clinic once a year and sees Milne every few months to maintain his prosthetic eye.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 18, 2025.
Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
-
Uncategorized4 months ago
Shop Proud, Eat Proud, Be Proud — Ottawa Canada Day Market This June 28th
-
4 months ago
Ring of Fire road to bring prosperity to First Nation, problems for caribou: report
-
4 months ago
Measles circulating in northeastern B.C. community, health officials warn
-
4 months ago
Canada’s world junior trial saw juries tossed, intense testimony. Here’s a recap
-
4 months ago
Former major leaguer, Jays doctor Ron Taylor dies
-
4 months ago
Jagmeet Singh apologizes for attending Kendrick Lamar concert after Drake calls him out
-
4 months ago
Anishinabek Nation chief says he briefed Ontario police on protests against Bill 5
-
4 months ago
161 bricks of suspected cocaine found on truck trying to cross Canada-U.S. border