Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alberta Hostage Taker Poses Risk On Release If Not Monitored: Parole Board

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 May, 2016 11:14 AM
    VANCOUVER — An Alberta man who took nine hostages in an Edmonton office building in 2009 still poses a danger to society and should be moved to a halfway house when granted automatic release, says the federal parole board.
     
    Patrick Clayton, 45, is scheduled for mandatory release on June 12, but the parole board recommends the new condition in addition to the others he's been under while on day parole.
     
    "The board finds that a real potential for violent behaviour continues to exist in your case," the board said in its latest decision for Clayton released Friday.
     
    "The board has noted the connection between substance abuse and your violent, threatening index offences."
     
    Clayton was granted day parole last November after serving about four years of his six-year, 10-month sentence.
     
    In October 2009, he stormed a Workers' Compensation Board office with a loaded rifle and held hostages at gun point for about 10 hours. For three weeks leading up to the crime, he did not eat, barely slept and was smoking up to 14 grams of crack cocaine a day. He was also operating his apartment as a "crack house."
     
    After sentencing in November 2011, Clayton was placed in two prisons in Edmonton, then held at the medium-security Mission Institution east of Vancouver.
     
    On day parole he completed a 70-day residential treatment program in the Fraser Valley and then was transferred to a residential treatment centre on Vancouver Island.
     
    In March he was moved to an undisclosed location and that's where he still lives, according to the decision.
     
    The board said Clayton has used drugs while on parole, and called his attitude "entitled" after he explained he had been celebrating his birthday. The board also expressed concern that he minimized the significance of breaching a condition.
     
    Also at issue is that Clayton has been living with a family member who is often away from the home working, said the board.
     
    "The board concludes that the oversight and monitoring your case requires — based in part on your very recent breach and misuse of drugs — will not be met by this release plan," it says.
     
    It found he will benefit from living at a halfway house, where he will have better access to supports and his day-to-day behaviours and attitudes will be monitored.
     
    Clayton must also abide by conditions that include not consuming alcohol or drugs, to follow his treatment plan, to report intimate relationships with women and to stay away from people who misuse substances.
     
    The decision said Clayton's criminal record began at a young age, and that he had incidents while incarcerated.
     
    When the board initially released the man on day parole, it did so in part based on progress it found that he made through working with aboriginal elders.
     
    The new decision notes he had a dysfunctional childhood and also said he was impacted by residential schools.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Universities Balance Accuser, Accused Rights In Sexual Misconduct Cases: Experts

    Universities Balance Accuser, Accused Rights In Sexual Misconduct Cases: Experts
    Accusations that the University of Victoria and Brock University warned women to stay quiet about alleged sexual misconduct reveal the balancing act post-secondary schools face between the rights of the accused and accuser, experts say.

    Universities Balance Accuser, Accused Rights In Sexual Misconduct Cases: Experts

    B.C. Police Watchdog Dismisses Vancouver Anti-Fur Protester's Complaint

    B.C. Police Watchdog Dismisses Vancouver Anti-Fur Protester's Complaint
    Taylor Freeman had said a warning letter from police infringed on his charter right to protest and unfairly restricted his travel through downtown Vancouver.

    B.C. Police Watchdog Dismisses Vancouver Anti-Fur Protester's Complaint

    Preliminary Hearing Set For Bathurst Police Officers On Michel Vienneau Manslaughter Case

    Preliminary Hearing Set For Bathurst Police Officers On Michel Vienneau Manslaughter Case
    Constables Patrick Bulger and Mathieu Boudreau of the Bathurst City Police each face charges of manslaughter with a weapon, assault with a weapon and unlawfully pointing a firearm.

    Preliminary Hearing Set For Bathurst Police Officers On Michel Vienneau Manslaughter Case

    Wife Of Woman Who Sued Wal-Mart In Same-Sex Bias Case Dies

    Wife Of Woman Who Sued Wal-Mart In Same-Sex Bias Case Dies
    Smithson's wife, Jacqueline Cote, sued in July in U.S. District Court in Boston seeking damages for the couple and any other Wal-Mart employees whose same-sex spouses were denied medical insurance.

    Wife Of Woman Who Sued Wal-Mart In Same-Sex Bias Case Dies

    Health Canada, Cfia Approve Genetically Engineered Potato With Reduced Browning

    Health Canada, Cfia Approve Genetically Engineered Potato With Reduced Browning
    J.R. Simplot Company was notified by both agencies in letters dated March 18 that it could sell its potatoes — which purportedly are less likely to bruise or turn brown when cut — to consumers or for livestock consumption

    Health Canada, Cfia Approve Genetically Engineered Potato With Reduced Browning

    Manitoba Politicians Promise Better Roads, Cheaper Education, Faster Health Care

    Manitoba Politicians Promise Better Roads, Cheaper Education, Faster Health Care
    Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari said she would shelve a planned $400-million highway bypass around St. Norbert, a neighbourhood at the south end of Winnipeg.

    Manitoba Politicians Promise Better Roads, Cheaper Education, Faster Health Care