Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Made Sexual Predator 'Our Problem,' American Prosecutor Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2019 02:54 AM

    A convicted killer and sexual predator who could have spent his life in Canadian prison was instead back in the United States Tuesday for a court hearing, as an American prosecutor questioned the Parole Board of Canada's logic in sending him her way.


    "They made him our problem," Niagara County District Attorney Caroline Wojtaszek said of 47-year-old William Shrubsall, who fractured one of his victims' skull with a baseball bat during his spree of violence in Nova Scotia during the late 1990s.


    "He is an extremely scary individual. He has the combination of brutal violence and sexual offences over the majority of his young adult to adult life. To me I can't think of anyone better to confine for the rest of his life."


    The Upstate New York prosecutor was referring to the Nov. 7 decision by two parole board members authorizing Shrubsall's release and deportation.


    The board's six-page ruling was based in part on the authors' belief the offender would "face many more years" of incarceration in Niagara County — where he jumped bail during his trial for sexually abusing a 17-year-old girl in 1996.


    Wojtaszek questioned that logic, saying there are limits on her ability to incarcerate Shrubsall, who has adopted the name Ethan Simon Templar MacLeod.


    "There is nothing in that (parole board) decision that would leave society to be any safer than it was when he was first designated a dangerous offender," she said.


    "We're confined by the sentencing structure of 1996 ... and so what you're looking at is four years and eight months before he's out. In no way does that create a safety net for society."


    Wojtaszek will now attempt to secure a conviction and the maximum sentence for Shrubsall jumping bail during his 1996 trial in Niagara County for sexual abuse of a 17-year-old girl he met at a party.


    On Monday, Shrubsall was handed over to the Niagara County police, and brought to a county jail to begin serving his sentence for the sexual abuse. He's eligible for parole in two years and four months for that offence.


    The maximum sentence for jumping bail is similar, with eligibility for bail at two years and four months, said Wojtaszek.


    Shrubsall's trial on the bail jumping charge has been scheduled to begin June 10.


    However, Wojtaszek argued Canada was in a better position to keep Shrubsall in jail due to the majority of his most violent crimes being committed in Nova Scotia.


    The court proceedings that led to Shrubsall's designation in 2001 as a dangerous offender — meaning he could be held in prison for an indefinite period — lasted over two months, and heard that some of his Canadian victims have suffered disabilities that will last a lifetime.


    In February 1998, while robbing a retail store, he struck a female employee with a baseball bat, fracturing her skull. A few months later, in May 1998, he attacked and sexually assaulted a woman walking home from work.


    In June 1998, he met a woman in a bar and took her to a residence in a taxi. He wouldn't let her leave his apartment, choking and sexually assaulting her.


    In his oral judgment, the Nova Scotia judge said he didn't see a "realistic prospect of controlling the threat of dangerousness and managing the risk" of Shrubsall as a regular offender.


    The judge ruled he was likely to continue to pose a risk to others that would "likely result in death, severe physical injury or psychological damage to a future victim."


    He was also described as "lacking a conscience."


    Shrubsall's record also includes bludgeoning his mother to death with a baseball bat in their home the night before his graduation, a crime committed while he was a juvenile.


    The parole board decision allowing his release said he was not currently considered to be a psychopath.


    It also said he had behaved well, had completed programs to reduce his violence, had been attending regular psychological counselling and had been developing a plan for his release into the community.


    However, it also said these factors "would not have been enough'' for his release without the board members' knowledge he would be deported to Niagara County to face jail time. Board members also noted he continued to be overly focused on himself, rather than the impact his crime had on his victims.


    Asked about the case, the parole board sent an email with general comments about its record, declining any specific comment.


    "I can tell you that as with all Parole Board of Canada decisions, the protection of society is the paramount consideration," wrote Holly Knowles, a board spokeswoman, in an email.


    "When taking decisions on the parole of an offender, board members do a thorough risk assessment. They review information from a wide range of sources, including information from the police and courts, psychological/psychiatric reports, risk assessment tools, the correctional plan and progress reports, information submitted by victims, and the offender's release plan."


    However, Wojtaszek said she agreed with Halifax Crown attorney Paul Carver — who led the effort to obtain Shrubsall's dangerous offender designation — that the board's ruling was based more on "hope than reason."

    She said it's possible, that as the date of Shrubsall's release approaches, that the state attorney general could apply for a special confinement order that he be retained in a centre for sexual offenders.


    But she said this would essentially be forcing the American authorities to go through a similar process to the dangerous offender designation in Canada 18 years ago.


    "We have to re-do in New York State what Paul Carver did in an attempt to have him civilly confined," she said.


    "My concern with that is that he committed very, very serious crimes in Canada and I don't see the rationale for letting him out."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dr Arun Kumar Garg Awarded The Highest Award Of UbC Dept. Of Pathology

    Dr Arun Kumar Garg Awarded The Highest Award Of UbC Dept. Of Pathology
    The award is named after Dr Hardwick a giant  in BC Medicine who  was Head and Professor of the Department of Pathology for  many years at UBC . 

    Dr Arun Kumar Garg Awarded The Highest Award Of UbC Dept. Of Pathology

    Rohingya Militant Group Massacred Nearly 100 Hindus In Myanmar, Amnesty International Reports

    Rohingya Militant Group Massacred Nearly 100 Hindus In Myanmar, Amnesty International Reports
    Amnesty International said that a new investigation had confirmed the militants killed 53 Hindus “execution-style”-- mostly children -- in the Kha Maung Seik village cluster in northern Maungdaw.

    Rohingya Militant Group Massacred Nearly 100 Hindus In Myanmar, Amnesty International Reports

    Two North Vancouver Children Affected By Carbon Monoxide While Boating

    Two North Vancouver Children Affected By Carbon Monoxide While Boating
    VANCOUVER — Boaters are being warned of the dangers of carbon monoxide after two children lost consciousness while on a boat over the Victoria Day long weekend.

    Two North Vancouver Children Affected By Carbon Monoxide While Boating

    B.C. To Spend $115 Million On Boosting Number Of Nurse Practitioner

    B.C. To Spend $115 Million On Boosting Number Of Nurse Practitioner
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia is creating 200 new nurse practitioner positions in an effort to connect more residents to a primary care provider.

    B.C. To Spend $115 Million On Boosting Number Of Nurse Practitioner

    Migrant Says His Facebook Posts Were Used To Counter Western Media

    Migrant Says His Facebook Posts Were Used To Counter Western Media
    Othman Hamdan was acquitted last September of three terrorism charges but immigration officials arrested him on grounds that he poses a danger to Canadians.

    Migrant Says His Facebook Posts Were Used To Counter Western Media

    Jagmeet Singh Says No To Trans Mountain, Maybe To Running In B.C. Byelection

    Jagmeet Singh Says No To Trans Mountain, Maybe To Running In B.C. Byelection
    With two NDP premiers at odds over the project, Singh has tried to remain neutral, assailing Ottawa's review process and the federal government's reasoning in approving the expansion.

    Jagmeet Singh Says No To Trans Mountain, Maybe To Running In B.C. Byelection