Friday, May 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

Kamloops Woman Who Set Her Children On Fire, Killing One, Granted Full Parole

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2019 06:21 PM

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - A woman who set her two children on fire 22 years ago, killing one of them, has been granted full parole.

     

    However, the Parole Board of Canada says Donna Hysop of Kamloops, B.C., is still not admitting responsibility for her crimes.

     

    Hysop, now 52, was convicted of second-degree murder and attempted murder for the incident in March 1997 that killed her five-year-old daughter and left her three-year-old son seriously injured and disfigured.

     

    Hysop was first granted day parole in March 2018 when the board concluded she was at a low risk to reoffend.

     

    According to a parole board decision dated Sept. 27, 2019, Hysop initially told people she had tried to kill herself and her children, but later claimed the fire was accidental.

     

    The board says she still denies setting the fire deliberately but tells Hysop, "you have in your own way taken responsibility by engaging in your correctional plan," adding that she has participated in counselling and programs while incarcerated.

     

    Hyslop's day parole conditions mandated she return to her halfway house in the Lower Mainland every night, and stay 100 kilometres away from her son.

     

    In granting full parole, the board noted Hysop's case management team recommended expanding her freedoms.

     

    The decision imposes several conditions, including staying away from children under 14 and staying outside a 100-kilometre radius of Salmon Arm, B.C., where her son lives. (CFJC)

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Food Fight: Liberals, Tories Trade Shots As Pre-campaign Battles Intensify

    Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor is trying to distinguish the Liberals as a party of scientific, evidence-based policy while she says Conservative Leader Andrew 

    Food Fight: Liberals, Tories Trade Shots As Pre-campaign Battles Intensify

    Huawei Canada Says It Met Federal Security Requirements For New Arctic 4G Project

    Huawei Canada says it has received federal approval to work with a northern telecom company and an Inuit development corporation to extend high-speed 4G

    Huawei Canada Says It Met Federal Security Requirements For New Arctic 4G Project

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son
    Police say the investigation is ongoing, and they aren't ruling out returning to the air if investigators are able to narrow the search area.

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill
    A Calgary judge is denying British Columbia's attempt to block Alberta's so-called Turn Off the Taps bill.

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill

    Group Of Teenagers Visiting Canada From Brazil Assaulted Aboard Vancouver’s 95 B-line For Not Speaking English

    Metro Vancouver Transit Police is appealing for witnesses in the case where group of teenagers visiting Canada from Brazil were assaulted aboard the 95 B-Line bus

    Group Of Teenagers Visiting Canada From Brazil Assaulted Aboard Vancouver’s 95 B-line For Not Speaking English

    Two Men Go Missing In Northern B.C. Near Where Body Is Found

    RCMP in northern British Columbia are searching for two young Vancouver Island men whose vehicle was discovered on fire Friday in the same area where police say a body was found.

    Two Men Go Missing In Northern B.C. Near Where Body Is Found