Man accused of killing his 2 sisters will get 60-day mental health treatment - Action News
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Ottawa

Man accused of killing his 2 sisters will get 60-day mental health treatment

An Ottawa man accused of killing his two sisters will undergo 60 days or less of treatment at the Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre after he was found unfit to stand trial at the present time.

Musab A-Noor declared unfit to stand trial at the present time in court-ordered assessment

Musab A-Noor wore a blanket over his head as he appeared in an Ottawa courtroom on Jan. 6, 2017 via video link from the Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre. (Lauren Foster-MacLeod/CBC)

An Ottawa man accused of killing his two sisters will undergo60 days or less of treatment at the Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre after he was found unfit to stand trial at the present time.

Musab A-Noor, 29, was charged with one count each of first-degree murder and second-degree murder after his sisters,Nasibaand Asma A-Noor, were found stabbed to deathin their home on McCarthy Road on Dec. 16.

Michelle Mathias, a forensic psychiatrist tasked withassessing him, said her opinion is that A-Nooris schizophrenic. She saidhe barely moved or communicated during their meetings, which started Dec. 30, and when he did hesometimes talked in rhymes and riddles.

She said she's "very confident" he's unfit to stand trial at this point because he has "very poor judgment,"hastrouble communicating and focusing, and difficulty understandingthe court process, for instance not knowing whatplea to make, or what a judge or Crown did.

The court didn't get anindication of how long his mental health may have been an issue. Mathias said he was sent to the Ottawa Hospital twice for mental health reasonsin the three days after his sisters were killed, and any visits before that were for physical health reasons.

An Ottawa police cruiser is parked outside a home on McCarthy Road where two women were found dead on Dec. 16, 2016. The victims were later identified as 29-year-old Nasiba A-Noor and 32-year-old Asma A-Noor. (CBC)

The accused appeared in an Ottawa courtroom Friday via a video link from the Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre. He stared off to the side with his hands clasped together and ablanket over his head, not moving.

The only word he spoke was "yes" whenasked if he could hear what was happening.

MusabA-Noorwas unable to attendpreviouscourt datesbecause he was in hospital. HislawyerSamirAdam said he was in an unresponsive, "catatonic" state when he was sent for a psychiatric assessment in late December.

Doctor says plan should work

Mathias's treatment plan keeps him in his bed at the Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre.

It includes keeping him on anti-psychotic and sedating medication, although she said herefused to take his anti-psychotic medication during the last two or three nights because he didn't believe he needed it.

She said she'd seen a slight improvement in his condition in the time she'd been seeing him, and that he should be fit to stand trial before the end of the 60-day treatment period.

Hismatter will be back incourt in a month for a status check, and again at the end of the 60 day period.