Wednesday, June 24, 2026
ADVT 
National

Parole Board Members' Inexperience Possible Factor In Woman's Death: Ex-members

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jan, 2020 09:49 PM

    MONTREAL - Two former Parole Board of Canada members say a change that resulted in the hiring of inexperienced members may have been a factor in the murder of a 22-year-old woman allegedly killed by a man previously convicted of murder and out on parole.

     

    Dave Blackburn and Jean-Claude Boyer both say changes brought in by the federal government in 2017 meant that the vast majority of the existing board members were replaced with people without prior experience.

     

    Blackburn and Boyer say that inexperience may have played into the 2019 decision to renew the day parole of 51-year-old Eustachio Gallese, who is accused of killing Marylene Levesque in Quebec City last week.

     

    In 2006, Gallese was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 15 years, after he killed his 32-year-old partner by beating her with a hammer before repeatedly stabbing her.

     

    Boyer says an experienced board member would have revoked Gallese's parole upon learning that a man with a history of violence against women had been given permission by his case worker to frequent sex workers.

     

    Blackburn, agrees, noting the board expressed concern with the strategy but failed to act to protect women like Levesque who work in the sex trade, essentially relegating them to second-class citizens.

     

    The Commissioner of Corrections Services and the chair of the Parole Board of Canada have launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding Gallese's release.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random
    Police say one man died at the scene and the second person died in hospital.

    Two Dead After Overnight Calgary Shooting Police Say Was Not Random

    'We Are Hockey' Unveiled At Sikh Heritage Museum In Abbotsford

    This exhibit offers visitors a chance to see the pioneers of minorities in hockey as they follow the timeline to the present day where players of Punjabi descent and other minorities are starting to break through into the professional leagues. 

    'We Are Hockey' Unveiled At Sikh Heritage Museum In Abbotsford

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract
    Export Development Canada says it's reviewing support it gave to SNC-Lavalin after learning of an allegation the agency backed the company on a dam project in Angola that it won corruptly.  

    EDC Investigating Claim It Backed SNC-Lavalin On Corrupt Angola Dam Contract

    Freeland Say Lifting U.S. Tariffs Is Part Of Ratification Of The New NAFTA

    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland is linking the lifting of "absurd" U.S. tariffs on Canadian and Mexican steel to the ratification of the new North American free-trade deal.

    Freeland Say Lifting U.S. Tariffs Is Part Of Ratification Of The New NAFTA

    Sikh Heritage Month launches in B.C.

    Sikh Heritage Month BC has launched a series of public awareness videos and premiere arts event – The Revival - to showcase the thriving arts and culture scene among Sikh youth in BC

    Sikh Heritage Month launches in B.C.

    Dozens Of Delegates Turn Their Backs On Trudeau As PM Defends His Feminist Credentials After Tossing 2 Women From Liberal Caucus

    Dozens Of Delegates Turn Their Backs On Trudeau As PM Defends His Feminist Credentials After Tossing 2 Women From Liberal Caucus
    Tracy Beshara, executive director of Marpole Oakridge Family Place in south Vancouver, said she has met Wilson-Raybould and she is a woman of "integrity and quality."

    Dozens Of Delegates Turn Their Backs On Trudeau As PM Defends His Feminist Credentials After Tossing 2 Women From Liberal Caucus