Nova Scotia

Psychiatric assessment ordered for N.S. man accused in violent hospital attack

A Nova Scotia provincial court judge has ordered a psychiatric assessment for a man accused of a violent attack in the emergency department of the province’s largest hospital in January.

Nicholas Robert Coulombe faces 9 charges, including attempted murder and aggravated assault

A man stands with his hands in his pocket and looking off into the distance.
Nicholas Robert Coulombe, 32, was charged with nine offences, including attempted murder and aggravated assault, after two staff members were stabbed in the emergency department of the Halifax Infirmary on Jan. 29. (Brett Ruskin/CBC)

A Halifax provincial court judge has ordered a psychiatric assessment for a man accused of a violent attack in the emergency department of the province's largest hospital in January.

Nicholas Robert Coulombe, 32, made a brief appearance in court Thursday morning. He's facing nine charges, including attempted murder and aggravated assault, in relation to a Jan. 29 incident in which a man stabbed two staff members at the Halifax Infirmary. One of them was critically injured.

Legal aid lawyer Colin Smith requested the assessment, telling the court that Coulombe has a history of mental health issues.

The assessment will be performed at the East Coast Forensic Hospital in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia's only secure mental health facility. It will help determine whether Coulombe can be held criminally responsible on the charges.

He is scheduled to return to court at the end of this month.

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