Mother Who Cannibalized Daughter Spared From Prison

B.C. judge cites mental disorder in finding woman not criminally responsible



July 21, 2003

NANAIMO, B.C. -- A Nanaimo woman slit her two-year-old daughter's throat before cutting up the body, cooking it with other ingredients and eating the soup.

Laurina Marie Aune cannibalized her daughter "so Kyla would be with me forever."

Details of the Nov. 1, 2002 killing and its aftermath were revealed in B.C. Supreme Court yesterday. Justice James Taylor ruled that while Ms. Aune knew she killed her daughter, she was not criminally responsible by reason of mental disorder -- she didn't know it was morally wrong.

Ms. Aune, 26, was remanded to the Forensic Psychiatric Institute in Port Coquitlam, where she will face a disposition hearing within 45 days. She suffers from schizophrenia.

This was the first time the public heard details of Ms. Aune cutting up the body. Judge Taylor ruled the information should be made public because people needed to know the reasons behind his decision.

"No one who hears of these circumstances can not be affected by them," said Judge Taylor.

In delivering his judgment, Judge Taylor said Ms. Aune was asked why she ate her daughter. She responded by saying: "I don't know. I felt compelled to do it. I didn't want to forget her ever."

Ms. Aune's lawyer, Tony Bryant, said Ms. Aune's family is having a difficult time with the disturbing incident. "Ms. Aune will struggle for some time, I don't think she'll ever get over it ever."

When asked how it was the family didn't pick up earlier signs of Ms. Aune's mental illness, they always explained it as "that's Laurina."

Ms. Aune sat impassively through the hearing, wearing a green and cream pant suit. She gave a small wave and smile to supporters as a deputy led her into the court. About a dozen family and friends of Ms. Aune attended the hearing, including Ms. Aune's mother Linda Aune and her former boyfriend, Scott May.

It was Mr. May who alerted the Ministry of Child and Family Development that he suspected something was wrong. He had not seen Kyla for six weeks, since taking her out at Halloween.

A social worker went to Ms. Aune's apartment in Nanaimo and was told the child was at a babysitter's, but the babysitter told the social worker she had not seen Kyla.

The social worker contacted Nanaimo RCMP, who visited Ms. Aune.

Police brought Ms. Aune to the RCMP detachment, where a two-hour interview took place.

The following day, during an interview with a doctor at Nanaimo Regional General Hospital, Ms. Aune confessed to killing Kyla. Police were notified, and Ms. Aune was taken into custody on Dec. 17.

During the trial, court heard Ms. Aune began hearing voices at age 12, after her parents split up. Her illness worsened after her daughter was born.

Mr. May told social workers he felt Ms. Aune was unstable. She had once told him the child had three different fathers and they kept changing bodies.

According to court documents Ms. Aune was said to have told officers she killed her daughter because she felt manipulated to do so.

"I almost felt like I didn't have any control over myself at the time ... I never wanted to hurt her."
Ms. Aune told police she and Kyla had just returned from taking her mother to the airport on Nov. 1, 2002 when it happened.

"I couldn't help think that she was hurting all the time. I don't really know what I was thinking at that point. I know that I just wanted to be closer to her," she said.

She told police she cooked the bones "to have Kyla with me forever."

Police said Aune told them she ate a piece of the heart because she felt that's where her child's spirit was.

The child's head was found in Ms. Aune's bedroom.

http://canada.com/national/story.asp?id=C2F23085-6606-4F09-9D32-48879CAB2B64