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Originally posted by colsislander
I don't believe they had the tapes till after the deal was made.I think her lawyer got in a bit of trouble because he knew about the tapes.
Originally posted by Sauron
"She doesn't have to say at all where she lives."
Canada's new national sex offender registry requires offenders to surrender details about their whereabouts, but Ontario's Ministry of Community Safety says Homolka - who goes by the name Karla Teale - doesn't qualify because she pleaded guilty to two counts of manslaughter
As her July 5 release date approaches, she'll be asked by her parole officer where she plans to move. But it's within her rights to refuse to disclose that information
Originally posted by Relentless
I fail to understand how it could be within the rights of someone on parale to disclose such information even to their parole officer. Am I reading this correctly? Is this accurate?
Originally posted by Sauron
As of July 5 2005, Karla Teale a.k.a Karla Homolka will be a free person after serving out her 12-year sentence for two counts of manslaughter and will be able to live anywhere she likes in Canada free of parole and the right to refuse discloser of where she goes.
[edit on 16/12/2004 by Sauron]
Convicted offenders will have to register within 15 days following a court order for registration or release from custody. They will be required to re-register annually and within 15 days of a change of residence.
They will also be obligated to provide local police with information such as addresses and telephone numbers, names and alias (es) and identifying marks and tattoos. Penalties will be provided for failing to comply with a registration order or for not giving truthful information.
Originally posted by Sauron
Shots; very nice post But, and here's the clincher.
Karla will be a free woman when released, she was charged with two counts of manslaughter, did her time in full and was not charged with any sex-related crime so her name will not be on the Sex Offender Registry.
[edit on 17/12/2004 by Sauron]
Still deemed dangerous by the National Parole Board, Karla Homolka, convicted in the slayings of two schoolgirls, won't be allowed to fade into obscurity when she completes her 12-year prison term in July, Ontario Attorney-General Michael Bryant promised yesterday.
Instead, Mr. Bryant said he will "look at every legal avenue" to ensure the public feels protected after Ms. Homolka walks free from the women's prison in Joliette, Que.
That will almost certainly mean applying a section of the Criminal Code allowing authorities to monitor high-risk ex-offenders, the province's top law-enforcement official said.
A parole board assessment, released this week, concluded that Canada's most notorious female prisoner poses a major risk of reoffending.