Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Long-Term Offender Robert Semchuk To Live In B.C. Halfway House Under Seven Strict Conditions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 May, 2015 01:12 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A designated long-term offender who stabbed a 60-year-old woman outside a Kamloops, B.C., hospital has been ordered to live in a halfway house for the foreseeable future.
     
    The Parole Board of Canada has ordered Robert Semchuk to live under seven strict conditions after his prison sentence expired Tuesday.
     
    The board's written decision says the 51-year-old remains at a high risk to re-offend.
     
    Semchuk will be bound by conditions that require him not to consume drugs and alcohol and avoid people involved with criminal activity.
     
    He must also participate in mental-health counselling, take medication as prescribed and avoid contact with any of his victims.
     
    In 2009, a B.C. Supreme Court judge named Semchuk a long-term offender and sentenced him to a nine-year prison term, which was shortened to six years with credit for time served.
     
    The Crown had applied to have Semchuk labelled a dangerous offender, a tag that would have seen him jailed indefinitely.
     
    In 2006, Semchuk attacked and stabbed a woman outside Royal Inland Hospital before fleeing with her purse in a stolen car.
     
    He was arrested following a police pursuit stretching from Kamloops to Merritt to Peachland.
     
    Less than a year after his arrest, Semchuk was charged with assault causing bodily harm for attacking a corrections officer at Kamloops Regional Correctional Centre.
     
    Semchuk was in segregation at the time and the officer was taking the handcuffed prisoner to another area in the jail. After head-butting the guard, Semchuk was tackled by four other officers.
     
    He was handed an additional 18 months in jail for the attack and ordered to spend another 30 days in segregation.
     
    Semchuk had been on parole since March 2013 and living at a Lower Mainland halfway house, where he had two run-ins with his supervisors. In one case, he failed to take his medication and in another he was late returning home.
     
    Parole documents say Semchuk was “warned and counselled" after those incidents.
     
    Authorities will meet to review Semchuk’s progress every three months for the next 10 years.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Royal Canadian Navy Retires Aging Warship In Halifax

    Royal Canadian Navy Retires Aging Warship In Halifax
    HALIFAX — The Royal Canadian Navy officially retired one of its warships today in Halifax. The destroyer HMCS Iroquois served the navy for nearly 43 years.

    Royal Canadian Navy Retires Aging Warship In Halifax

    Canada, U.S. Announce Broad New Uniform Standards For Rail Safety

    Canada, U.S. Announce Broad New Uniform Standards For Rail Safety
    WASHINGTON — Canada and the United States are announcing wide-ranging, new rail-safety standards with the aim of avoiding disasters like the one that devastated Lac-Megantic, Que., in 2013

    Canada, U.S. Announce Broad New Uniform Standards For Rail Safety

    Sentencing Arguments Underway For Ex-quebec Lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault

    QUEBEC — Sentencing arguments are underway in Quebec City in the fraud case of former lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault. The 76-year-old pleaded guilty last December to fraud and breach of trust.

    Sentencing Arguments Underway For Ex-quebec Lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault

    Conservatives Increase Fundraising Advantage In First Quarter Of Election Year

    Conservatives Increase Fundraising Advantage In First Quarter Of Election Year
    The latest financial reports filed with Elections Canada show the governing Conservatives raked in $6.3 million in the first three months of 2015 — up almost $1.7 million over the same period last year.

    Conservatives Increase Fundraising Advantage In First Quarter Of Election Year

    Who You Know, Not What You Know, Was Once A Factor In P.E.I. Politics

    Who You Know, Not What You Know, Was Once A Factor In P.E.I. Politics
    The days when getting your road paved in P.E.I. meant voting for the right politician might be gone, but Green Leader Peter Bevan-Baker says political connections still pose an obstacle for third parties trying to make a breakthrough in Monday's election.

    Who You Know, Not What You Know, Was Once A Factor In P.E.I. Politics

    Premier Prentice Says Alberta NDP Pipeline Policy Will Mirror Mulcair's

    Premier Prentice Says Alberta NDP Pipeline Policy Will Mirror Mulcair's
    EDMONTON — Premier Jim Prentice is ratcheting up warnings of a NDP-governed Alberta, bringing federal NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair into the fray and saying the party has a "fundamental distrust of business."

    Premier Prentice Says Alberta NDP Pipeline Policy Will Mirror Mulcair's