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A Canadian man who brutally murdered his girlfriend in a public setting received a reduced sentence, with considerations given to his racial background.
Everton Downey, 35, was found guilty of killing 25-year-old Melissa Blimkie in a violent incident at the Metrotown shopping mall in Burnaby, British Columbia, in December 2021.
Last month, Downey was sentenced to life in prison after being convicted of second-degree murder.
While prosecutors had urged the court to bar him from parole for 15 years, British Columbia Supreme Court Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes opted for a 12-year parole ineligibility period instead.
The judge’s decision was influenced by Downey’s Impact of Race and Culture Assessment (IRCA), a Canadian report often used for black offenders. This report highlights how factors like poverty and marginalization could have impacted their lives.
According to the National Post, the IRCA indicated that Downey did not experience explicit racism during his upbringing in Toronto.
However, it claimed he later experienced disconnection, isolation and discrimination ‘he had not previously encountered’ after moving to British Columbia in 2016.
‘Mr. Downey has a substantial criminal record involving violence and firearms,’ Holmes said. ‘I recognize, however, that the aggravating effect of his criminal record is offset in part by the mitigating circumstances of his background.’
Everton Downey, 35, was found guilty of fatally stabbing his girlfriend Melissa Blimkie, 25, in December 2021 at the Metrotown shopping mall
Downey fled the scene after killing Blimkie (pictured). He represented himself in court and said he had ‘kind of blacked out’ before the murder
Downey was described in the assessment as a ‘black man of African Nova Scotian, African American and Jamaican ancestry.’
His report was written by University of Calgary social work associate professor Patrina Duhaney.
‘He grew up in Toronto in predominantly black and racially diverse neighborhoods and attended racially diverse schools,’ Holmes’ decision said.
Downey ‘felt that he did not experience overt racism’ and that ‘his experience living in communities which normalized racial diversity shaped his early sense of identity and belonging.’
The convicted killer said that changed when he left his home city for British Columbia.
‘He found a much smaller black population, and the cultural norms among black communities felt unfamiliar to him,’ the judge wrote in her decision.
She added that Downey experienced racial discrimination ‘in the community and in the institutional setting.’
Downey’s background report said he was a ‘black man of African Nova Scotian, African American and Jamaican ancestry’ and claimed he had experienced some racism
University of Calgary social work associate professor Patrina Duhaney authored Downey’s Impact of Race and Culture Assessment
Downey fatally stabbed his girlfriend in a stairwell at the Metrotown mall on December 19, 2021
Holmes acknowledged that Downey had a ‘significant criminal record that includes serious offenses of violence’ before killing Blimkie.
Downey had also previously served time in prison, though details of those earlier crimes were not specified.
However, the judge said his IRCA made ‘clear that broader systemic, structural, and community factors relating to Mr. Downey’s experience as a black person have played a part in his life experience.’
That included ‘various types of trauma, negative peer influences, and mental health challenges,’ the judge said.
Downey grew up experiencing domestic violence at home, shootings in his neighborhood and poverty.
His father was also described as being absent during his upbringing, all factors which contributed to Downey’s apparent ‘lasting sense of danger and mistrust.’
Downey’s report demonstrated ‘early exposure to violence, chronic instability, poverty, systemic anti–black racism and untreated mental health symptoms.’
The judge specifically pointed to Downey’s ‘hypervigilance, that may be trauma related.’
Blimkie was honored as a ‘strong, intelligent and independent young woman’ who died because of a ‘senseless act of violence’
Downey claimed he thought he was being watched, followed and drugged in the months leading up to the fatal stabbing
Downey fatally stabbed his girlfriend in a stairwell at the Metrotown mall on December 19, 2021.
A public obituary for Blimkie said she died due to a ‘senseless act of violence’ and remembered her as a ‘strong, intelligent and independent young woman.’
The two had been in a relationship ‘for some time’ prior to the killing, per the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
He defended himself in court and said he ‘kind of blacked out’ before killing Blimkie, according to Vancouver is Awesome.
Downey claimed he thought he was being watched, followed and drugged in the months leading up to the fatal stabbing.
‘After we entered the sliding doors, I lost it,’ he told the court, per the outlet.
‘I was hearing voices, “She’s going to kill you! She’s going to set you up! She’s going to kill you!”‘ Downey said. ‘I just remember not being able to control myself.’
Downey fled the scene after stabbing Blimkie and interacted with nine civilians before being taken into custody.
The Daily Mail reached out to Canada’s Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, which investigated Downey’s killing of his girlfriend; Duhaney, who wrote Downey’s IRCA; and the Supreme Court of British Columbia, where Holmes serves, for further comment.