Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Killed a family: Mass murderer seeking parole

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Sep, 2021 10:08 AM
  • Killed a family: Mass murderer seeking parole

BOWDEN, ALBERTA - A man convicted of the mass murder of a family nearly 40 years ago is to seek his release once again when he appears today before the Parole Board of Canada.

David Shearing, who now goes by the name David Ennis, shot and killed George and Edith Bentley; their daughter, Jackie; and her husband, Bob Johnson, while the family was on a camping trip in the Clearwater Valley near Wells Gray Provincial Park, about 120 kilometres north of Kamloops, B.C., in 1982.

He kept the Johnsons' daughters — Janet, 13, and Karen, 11 — alive for almost a week and sexually assaulted them before taking them into the woods, one at a time, and killing them.

The B.C. man then put all six bodies in the family car and set it on fire.

Shearing, 62, pleaded guilty in 1984 to six counts of second-degree murder and was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years. The judge at the time described the murders as "a cold-blooded and senseless execution of six defenceless and innocent people."

Ennis applied for parole in 2008 and again in 2012. His applications were both rejected because he still had violent sexual fantasies and hadn't completed sex offender treatment.

He applied again in 2014 but withdrew his request a month before the hearing was to take place.

Friends and families of the victims have launched an online petition ahead of the latest hearing at Bowden Institution in central Alberta that urges the parole board to keep Ennis in prison.

"We, the undersigned, feel that the release of David Ennis, formerly David Shearing, into the community would jeopardize the safety of all citizens, but, more importantly, our children. As well, the heinous nature of his crimes should preclude any possibility of release," reads the change.org petition which has close to 100,000 signatures.

If Ennis were to be granted day parole, he would be allowed to live in a halfway house. If full parole were granted, he would be allowed to live in the community.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

'Wonderful Little Bird': Alberta Man Retrieves His First Plane 48 Years Later

Growing up on a farm near Cremona, Alta., about 80 kilometres northwest of Calgary, he was obsessed with airplanes as a kid and became a fully licensed pilot by the time he was 17.

'Wonderful Little Bird': Alberta Man Retrieves His First Plane 48 Years Later

Burnaby RCMP Warn Of An Increase Of Break-ins At Lower-Level Apartment Units

The Burnaby RCMP have noticed an increase in residential break and enters occurring in lower-level apartment units.    

Burnaby RCMP Warn Of An Increase Of Break-ins At Lower-Level Apartment Units

North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price

North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price
North American stock markets suffered their worst meltdown since the global financial crisis as a collapse in oil prices triggered a plunge in the energy sector and prompted the loonie to take a dive.    

North American Stock Markets Suffer Meltdown Prompted By Collapsing Oil Price

Dr. Bonnie Henry, Virus Hunter, Healer, Resolves To 'Break' COVID-19

At the end of a stark news conference during which Dr. Bonnie Henry wiped tears as she broke the news confirming diagnosis of two cases of COVID-19 transmission at a North Vancouver long-term care home, she worried she was about to frighten her parents.

Dr. Bonnie Henry, Virus Hunter, Healer, Resolves To 'Break' COVID-19

Suspect Dies, Three RCMP Officers Hurt, During Weekend Arrest In Whistler, B.C.

Suspect Dies, Three RCMP Officers Hurt, During Weekend Arrest In Whistler, B.C.
The office that investigates all cases of police-involved death or serious injury in British Columbia has been notified about a fatality in Whistler.    

Suspect Dies, Three RCMP Officers Hurt, During Weekend Arrest In Whistler, B.C.

Two Victoria Men Face Second-degree Murder Charges In 2018 Slaying

Two Victoria Men Face Second-degree Murder Charges In 2018 Slaying
Two Victoria men are due in court Monday to face second-degree murder charges in connection with a 41-year-old man's death in September 2018.

Two Victoria Men Face Second-degree Murder Charges In 2018 Slaying