PATH stabber Rohinie Bisesar remains a very sick woman who still has no “deep remorse” for killing a complete stranger and the MBA graduate is so delusional that she’s been been applying for jobs from her secure forensic unit at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.
Those were some of the disturbing details found in recently-released reasons for the Ontario Review Board’s decision last month to keep Bisesar in the six-bed, highly-monitored secure unit at CAMH. While she continues to pose a “significant threat” to public safety, the board is hopeful she might recover enough over the next year that she could be moved into the general unit.
More alarming is that Bisesar, 43, was actually seeking passes into the community where she’d be “indirectly supervised.” Her psychiatrist warned such unescorted visits at this time could have “catastrophic results” and the board agreed that for now, she must be accompanied off hospital grounds by staff and Toronto Police have to be notified.
A fixture at coffee shops in the financial district, the homeless business grad had been suffering from commanding hallucinations she kept well hidden...
“Ms. Bisesar considers herself to be ready for discharge to the community at the present time, which represents a combination of limited insight and a grandiose self-appraisal, possibly as a defense mechanism, but nonetheless as an unrealistic appreciation of her circumstances,” the report warns.
In further evidence of her lack of insight into her serious illness, she’s also been “actively pursuing job opportunities, both in CAMH and in the community, in spite of not having the passes to pursue same.” And even after being advised to set more realistic goals, Bisesar continues to send out applications.
“This is a concerning issue when it comes to risk,” the board says.