Government can’t stop Homolka’s pardon plea

Convicted killer could apply before new legislation tabled

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OTTAWA -- Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the government is powerless to stop killer Karla Homolka from applying for a pardon when she becomes eligible this summer -- and that 99 per cent of applications are approved by the National Parole Board.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 19/04/2010 (5137 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the government is powerless to stop killer Karla Homolka from applying for a pardon when she becomes eligible this summer — and that 99 per cent of applications are approved by the National Parole Board.

"The law will allow Karla Homolka to apply for a pardon this year," Harper told a gathering Monday to mark national crime victims week.

"In fact, more than 99 per cent of pardon applications that reach the adjudication stage are granted."

FRANK GUNN / CANADIAN PRESS ARCHIVES
Karla Homolka
FRANK GUNN / CANADIAN PRESS ARCHIVES Karla Homolka

Harper’s comments suggest the government intends to go further than restricting pardons for sex offenders –that others will be included in new legislation designed to make pardons harder or even impossible to obtain for certain types of offenders.

The government is planning to introduce new legislation to toughen the pardon system, in reaction to revelations earlier this month that sex offender Graham James, the disgraced former hockey coach, received a pardon three years ago.

"Even though he ruined the lives of boys that just wanted to play hockey, he can travel without having to admit his criminal record," Harper said. "That, my friends, is how the laws have been written over the past few decades, written when soft-on-crime attitudes were fashionable and concern for criminals took priority over compassion for victims."

Harper did not mention that his government reviewed the system for sex-offender pardons in 2006 and opted for minor administrative tinkering rather than changing legislation to make it harder or even impossible for people like James to be pardoned.

Public Safety Minister Vic Toews acknowledged the first review didn’t go far enough. Toews said he expects to table a bill by the fall at the latest.

Under the current law, offenders can apply to the National Parole Board for pardons three or five years after completing their sentences, depending on the gravity of the crime.

The board has said it has no discretion to refuse pardons as long as the offenders meet the key requirement of demonstrating they have been upstanding citizens since serving their sentence.

Homolka was freed from prison in July 2005 after serving 12 years for manslaughter for her role in the sex killings of teenagers Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy. Video tapes discovered after she had reached a plea bargain showed her to have a more active role in helping her then husband, Paul Bernardo.

Offenders convicted of first- and second-degree murder are not eligible to apply for pardons.

 

— Canwest News Service

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