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Man who killed nun freed with conditions

MONTREAL — In what a Quebec judge called a unique case for both science and justice, a man who killed a nun while having an epileptic seizure was released under the strictest of conditions Tuesday.

MONTREAL — In what a Quebec judge called a unique case for both science and justice, a man who killed a nun while having an epileptic seizure was released under the strictest of conditions Tuesday.

Martin Rondeau was freed after two-and-a-half years behind bars, but under court-ordered conditions aimed at preventing damage when he is deemed to be most dangerous: in his sleep.

Rondeau, 33, suffers from a rare form of nocturnal epilepsy that causes him to have overnight seizures.

It was in such a state that Rondeau beat an elderly nun named Estelle Lauzon to death in a halfway house where Rondeau was staying in 2007.

Lauzon belonged to the Sisters of Providence Convent and founded the halfway house where the attack occurred. Rondeau was a tenant trying to get his life together.

Rondeau, who has no memory of the attack, was found not criminally responsible last week because he was suffering from mental health problems related to the epilepsy.

It took a judge another six days to determine what conditions would be appropriate for such a rare case.

Quebec Superior Court Justice Guy Cournoyer decided Rondeau must live in a secluded home belonging to his family, must take his medication, follow a curfew, sleep alone, and be required to enter and leave the home with a personalized alarm code.

Cournoyer had said he wanted to take his time considering conditions for Rondeau, since there is no apparent Canadian jurisprudence for a case where epilepsy was used as a defence.

A doctor who testified in the case says Rondeau, if he’s seizure-free for a year under medication, should not have any more attacks if he takes his pills.

Rondeau’s lawyer hailed the co-operation between all parties involved. The judge, police and opposing lawyers co-operated on a solution. Even nuns who were friends with the victim said they forgave Rondeau.

“Everyone worked on the case together, it was a unique case for everyone,” said Rondeau’s lawyer, Annie Emond. “He was really patient, the only thing he wanted to know is what his medical condition was and how he could be treated. He never wanted to be released until he knew that he could be properly treated.”