Managing Murderous Malevolence
"You can have inmates that may lack remorse or be a psychopath, but we can still manage their behaviour in a medium security environment.""It's important to remember that in a maximum security environment over 95 percent of the inmates that are there are there because of their behaviour. They're assaultive, they're harming other inmates, they're assaulting staff. That's not the case with this particular offender; he can actually be managed in medium security.""Paul Bernardo spent 30 consecutive years in maximum security. He was transferred to medium security, and at this point, there's absolutely no talk of going to a lower security level."Anne Kelly, Commissioner of Corrections Canada
"My question to you then: if not Paul Bernardo, then which dangerous offender, rapist, serial killer needs to be in a maximum security institution?""If not Paul Bernardo, the worst of the worst, then who?"Conservative Member of Parliament Tony Baldinelli
Karla Homolka |
Paul
Bernardo is the most notorious rapist, child-killer in Canada. His
crimes of predation on women and girls shocked the nation. He tortured
and raped, then murdered two schoolgirls, then raped and murdered his
obliging wife Karla Homolka's 15-year-old sister. He and his then-wife were
responsible for the deaths of 15-year-old Kristen French and
14-year-old Leslie Mahaffy, both of whom were kidnapped, tortured, raped
and murdered. Before Bernardo turned to murder he embarked on a raping
epidemic in the early1990s, was never apprehended, leaving an aura of
terror in the St. Catharines and Scarborough area.
Paul Bernardo arrives at the provincial courthouse in the back of a police van in Toronto in a Nov. 3, 1995. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn |
Appearing
before a parliamentary committee on Monday, the Commissioner of
Corrections Canada defended the decision to move Paul Bernardo, an
unrepentant murderer of children, to a medium-security prison, averring
he could be safely housed there. But the reasoning behind the decision
to extract this man from the high-security prisons he was formerly kept
in remains unclear. His wife spent a dozen years in prison for her part
in his atrocities, but his term was an indeterminate one, that he never
be set free into society.
MPs
on the House of Commons Public Safety Committee were tasked with
studying the reclassification from maximum to medium security that was
made in a surprise move earlier in the year. It seems that under the new
'consciousness' ideology that has swept the country with DEI,
postmodernism, cultural relativism and empathy for the criminal class,
the motivation though unspoken, may have been to enrich the
incarceration experience of this man, who as a certified psychopath
utterly lacks empathy for anyone else and feels no need to address the
impact of his sadistic malevolence in sexual violence pathology.
The
decision to transfer this monster arrived out of an extensive internal
review at Corrections Canada. In their concern over improving the
well-bring of Bernardo it appears to have occurred to no one in
authority that it might be a good idea to alert the French and Mahaffy
families prior to the transfer taking place; likely it did occur, but
the decision was taken to act, rather than help set in motion actions
brought by the French and Mahaffy families to stop the transfer from
taking place.
When
news broke, back in the summer of the fait accompli, the public was
outraged, demanding an explanation. And that demand, naturally enough,
led to the striking of a parliamentary committee to look into the
matter, reflecting in part the disturbance felt by many parliamentarians
at this flouting of a judge and jury's decision on the federal justice
system's obligation to punish this inhumane transgressor of humanity's
most sacred right; that of life itself.
A man watches an interview with Karla Homolka on television station RDI in Montreal. ((Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)) |
The
Commissioner stood before the committee to state that irrespective of
Bernardo's viciously savage history as a predator of the first order, he
'qualified' for the transfer based solely on the internal correctional
system's rules. According to Ms. Kelly, the medium security facility to
which Bernardo was transferred has the very same high walls, guard
towers, food and size of cells. The difference, she stated, was that
there Bernardo was permitted more time away from his cell and with other
prisoners, enabling him to take part in more programming.
In
previous testimony, she raised the issue of Bernardo's life being in
potential danger from other inmates in maximum security. No one could
possibly be over-concerned over harm being done to this man while in the
prison system. Yet with that issue in mind, allowing him more time out
of the protection of his cell, and greater time in the company of other
prisoners viewed in the light of his personal safety, the original
concern seems to have been set aside.
Because
of the nature of the crimes he committed and the utter lack of remorse
he has demonstrated, Ms. Kelly stated that Bernardo is considered a high
risk to the safety of the public. Given these realities, any further
reduction in his security classification is therefore made unlikely. The
very thought of this odious killer being given even greater freedoms in
a minimum security establishment is mind-boggling; one assumes that
this was brought up as a reassurance it would never occur, given his
ongoing public threat status. And this reassurance is meant to reflect
well on the decision-making of the authorities at Corrections Canada?
The
House of Commons is prepared to debate a Conservative private member's
bill to prevent anyone convicted of first-degree murder more than once
or classified as a dangerous offender, from being moved. When Ms. Kelly
was asked to comment, she responded it would create major issues for
Corrections Canada and needlessly, since the agency ensures at all times that people who cannot safely be moved away from maximum security must remain there.
"We might need more space at maximum security and also, at this point, there's no incentive for offenders to participate in rehabilitation programs, in terms of maintaining good behaviour.""The fact is that, you know, we have security classification, we have processes, but they are inmates that will never make their way to minimum security."Anne Kelly, Commissioner of Corrections Canada
Labels: Comfort for Murderers, Corrections Canada, Moving Maximum Security Inmates to Medium Security, Parliamentary committee, Paul Bernardo
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