Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Shrubsall sentenced for fleeing to Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2020 07:02 PM
  • Shrubsall sentenced for fleeing to Canada

A New York state judge has sentenced a man who committed violent sexual crimes in Nova Scotia to between two and six years of additional jail time for absconding from justice and fleeing to Canada in 1996.

William Shrubsall carried out a series of rapes and beatings against Halifax women after he jumped bail and found his way to the provincial capital.

U.S. district attorney Caroline Wojtaszek confirmed the sentence in an interview today, adding that during the hearing in Niagara County, N.Y., on Wednesday she argued Shrubsall was a brutal and manipulative man who was capable of further harm to women.

The 49-year-old American — who now goes by the name Ethan Simon Templar MacLeod — originally fled to Canada to avoid sentencing on sexual assault charges in the United States.

Shrubsall was deported to New York on Jan. 22, 2019 after he obtained a controversial release from the Parole Board of Canada based on its view he stood to serve many more years in American penitentiaries.

He is currently serving a sentence of two-and-one-third to seven years for his original conviction in absentia for the sexual assault of the young woman.

Wojtaszek says the sentence for jumping bail will be on top of his existing sentence, and that the earliest Shrubsall could be eligible for parole is in about four years.

Shrubsall was designated a dangerous offender in Canada in 2001 after the American fugitive committed a series of attacks against women in Halifax.

The crimes included the fracturing of one victim's skull with a baseball bat in 1998 to the point she spent five days in a coma and almost died.

Wojtaszek has said that initially U.S. authorities simply didn't know where Shrubsall was after he suddenly disappeared on the third day of his sexual abuse trial, leaving a suicide note.

In Canada, Shrubsall used a series of aliases as he first stalked a woman he'd met and then went on to commit brutal crimes against three others.

In February 1998, he inflicted the baseball bat assault on a clerk in a Halifax waterfront store.

Three months later, he beat, robbed and sexually assaulted a 19-year-old university student in a south-end Halifax driveway. And in June 1998, he choked and confined a 26-year-old woman.

Those came on top of his American crimes, which included beating his mother to death when he was 17 in their home in Niagara Falls, N.Y. He told the court at the time that his mother had abused him.

MORE National ARTICLES

Saint John Police Chief Says Oland Murder Investigation No Longer Active

Police Chief Bruce Connell made the statement the day after New Brunswick's Public Prosecution Services announced they will not appeal Dennis Oland's acquittal.

Saint John Police Chief Says Oland Murder Investigation No Longer Active

Judge Finds Calgary Man Guilty In Grandson's Death

Judge Finds Calgary Man Guilty In Grandson's Death
Allan Perdomo Lopez was charged with manslaughter in the 2015 death of five-year-old Emilio Perdomo.

Judge Finds Calgary Man Guilty In Grandson's Death

Quebec Police Investigate Possible Hate Crime After Excrement Left On Storefront

Quebec City police say they've opened an investigation into a possible hate crime after the owner of a clothing boutique that sells Islamic headscarves reported that someone had smeared feces on the front door of the shop.

Quebec Police Investigate Possible Hate Crime After Excrement Left On Storefront

Liberals Name Candidate In Wilson-Raybould's Riding

The Liberals now have a candidate in the British Columbia riding of Vancouver Granville, where their biggest rival will be someone they once called their own.    

Liberals Name Candidate In Wilson-Raybould's Riding

Police In B.C. Bring Down Emu With Stun Gun

Police In B.C. Bring Down Emu With Stun Gun
Mounties in the Vancouver Island town of Chemainus say they had to resort to drastic measures in an effort to get an errant emu out of the way of highway traffic.

Police In B.C. Bring Down Emu With Stun Gun

Trudeau Breached Conflict Of Interest Act, Says Ethics Commissioner

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau violated the Conflict of Interest Act by improperly pressuring former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to halt the criminal prosecution of SNC-Lavalin

Trudeau Breached Conflict Of Interest Act, Says Ethics Commissioner