Posted on 06/02/2005 11:15:52 AM PDT by GMMAC
Homolka hearing begins in Quebec Court
By TERRY WEBER
Toronto Globe and Mail
Thursday, June 2, 2005
Karla Homolka, one of the country's most reviled killers, made her first public appearance in a decade Thursday, attending a Quebec court hearing to determine whether she should be placed under increased scrutiny when she ends her prison sentence next month. According to television and wire reports from the Joliette, Que., courthouse, Ms. Homolka, dressed in a pinkish suit and sporting blond hair, was quietly brought into the courtroom in handcuffs about 10 a.m. EDT.
After being seated, her handcuffs were removed.
Her lawyer, Sylvie Bordelais, then asked that the motion brought by the Ontario government which is seeking strict controls on Ms. Homolka after her release be thrown out, arguing that the province's request breaches a deal reached more than a decade earlier when she agreed to plead guilty and testify against her former husband, Paul Bernardo.
The request was rejected by Judge Jean Beaulieu, allowing Thursday's hearing to proceed.
Earlier, Ms. Homolka arrived at a Quebec courthouse under heavy guard to face calls from the Ontario government that she be put under close watch following her release from prison next month.
Televised images from Joliette, Que., showed a crush of journalists trying to get photos of Ms. Homolka as she was brought into the courthouse by van just before 7 a.m. EDT.
She was not visible as the vehicle drove into an indoor parking bay. The doors to the outside were closed before Ms. Homolka was taken from the van.
Outside the courthouse, curious onlookers gathered early, trying to get a glimpse of Ms. Homolka.
Lance Campeau, who travelled from Montreal for the hearing, told Canadian Press that "I want to see how she reacts, her facial expressions does she cough, does she turn her head, will she address anyone with her eyes?
"I'm not sure she's aware how much attention she's attracting."
Armand Goulet, a regular visitor to the courthouse, also told CP that he just wanted "to see Karla."
"We want to see if she has black hair," said Mr. Goulet, 72, referring to a recent media report that she had dyed her blond hair.
"We've been talking about her the last few days. There are some people who are afraid of her and there are others who aren't."
The Ontario government is asking a judge to invoke controls on Ms. Homolka's movements after her release from prison on July 5, when she finishes her sentence for her role in the murders of Ontario schoolgirls Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy and the death of her sister Tammy Homolka.
Thursday marks Ms. Homolka's first public appearance in more than a decade. She pleaded guilty to her role in the killings in 1993 and subsequently testified at the trial of her former husband Paul Bernardo, who is now serving life behind bars for the murders.
The details of the crimes shocked the nation, with both Ms. Homolka and Mr. Bernardo quickly becoming among the most reviled criminal figures in Canadian history.
The Ontario government's application is being made under Section 810 of the Criminal Code, which can be used to control where offender go and whom they see even after they finish serving their sentences.
The provision was the result of public outcry in the 1990s over the need to protect the public from sex offenders who reoffended after their release. If granted, an order under the section would run 12 months.
The Crown is expected to argue that Ms. Homolka is a danger to the public.
Published reports out of Quebec earlier in the week have alleged she has been corresponding with Jean-Paul Gerbert, a male inmate who has been incarcerated in Quebec for the 1998 second-degree murder of his girlfriend, 23-year-old Cathy Caretta. She was strangled after trying to break up with Mr. Gerbet.
It remains unknown exactly where Ms. Homolka intends to live after her release.
Ms. Homolka's lawyers are expected to call evidence from a psychiatrist who will say that Ms. Homolka is no longer a danger to the public as well as a case-management work.
Speaking with reporters outside the courthouse, lawyer Tim Danson, who represents the French and Mahaffy families, said the families want a court order forcing Ms. Homolka to keep authorities informed of where she lives and works following her release.
They also want her prevented from contacting the victims' families and from associating with anyone with a criminal record. The also want Ms. Homolka to report to authorities twice a month an notify them of any travel plans so they can relay that information to officials in those jurisdictions.
"I think it's important that authorities know where she is at all times," Mr. Danson said.
Flash Video narrated by the Globe's Christie Blatchford
***As the loving father of children of both genders, I sincerely hope you'll agree that this warning plainly works both ways. Doubtless no reasonable parent wants their son with the likes of a woman Holmolka either. ***
Of course I agree.
See #39
Now if they can find a Doctor who can honestly say she's insane then do it and lock her in a nuthouse for the rest of her life.
If the she is indeed insane, who should be the asylum keeper? Not politicians worried about reelection, I hope and pray.
The point is she served all her time. She didn't make up the 12 year sentence . The Crown did.
As sad as it sounds she kept her side of the deal . The Crown , especially Liberal AG , on the other hand , isn't keeping theirs . The terms of the deal were made 12 years ago , not now . And the next time a criminal is needed to do a deal they'll think twice about making one with the Ontario AG's office . Believe it or not, it has to do with integrity .
I think the fact that she fudged a bit on her level of involvement by playing the victim, should they actually throw the deal out would in fact send a message to anyone else making a plea to put all the cards on table upfront and you won't have your deal dumped. That the AG is sticking to a bad deal with someone they now realize is a sociopath arguably tells future crooks that they should just say enough to get the minimum sentence and you can get away with murder.
>>the "deal with the devil" she got for testifying against Paul Barnardo was made<<
with the prosecuter knowing everything available about the case. S/he is the one who probably needs to spend some time behind bars for not protecting your community as her/his oath of office stated.
I would love to sign contracts with you. Just so I could make changes that aren't in the contract.
I've never been in prison but I have often thought that if I ever was I would probably refuse to go to any parole hearings. Why you ask?
I'm an old man who would have one tough time asking permission to do all and or anything from a parole officer who didn't know anything about me other than what was in print before him. I think it would be much easier to serve my sentence and then be free from the controls again.
We're talking about Canada here.
I've seen no documentation that says either the Ontario Government says she is a sociopath or any that says she is one. She has undergone psychiatric examinations while imprisoned and now the government is attempting to control her using Section 810 not the Mental Health Act . That in itself should tell you she's not a psychopath ,
She may well have an evil look in her eye . Save us all if that becomes criteria for what in this case is nothing more than harassment motivated by stupid Liberal politicians
Poor choice of words on my part. The reports on her current mental health are mixed but I will admit they haven;t labeled her any sort of 'path to my understanding. What the credentials of the individuals making the reports are is unknown. She has passed off BS before but I will accept their assessments.
Professional opinions aside, since I ain't no fancy doctor, but there is more than just an evil eye at play here. Raping her own sister, participating in the death of that sister for the purposes of rape, remaining silent about it, marrying the man who she helped rape and kill her sister, participating willingly in the violent rapes and torturous confinement and deaths of two teenage girls (and she had ample opportunity to turn the girls free during their days of torture as the tapes would later prove), allegedly participating in the rape of another, the now famed Jane Doe and now by media accounts in a relationship with another murderer, does not sound like the kind of person I want living next door to me and my two little girls regardless of any label applied to her. That the level of her participation in a number of these events came to light only after the deal was signed is enough for me to question whether the deal stands and the punishment was reasonable.
If it was reasonable and to be fair, let a jury of her peers evaluate the case with what we know now. If they find a punishment of 12 years or less is suitable, then let her go. If not, tack on any balance they see fit and let her rot.
Unfortunately woulda , coulda , shouda doesn't work in a court of law.and the time to act has been lost . She served her time . And like it or not , that was the deal.
Harassing her now by placing more restrictions on her was not part of the deal , She may well eventually be seen as a victim .
Her crimes and sins are her's and they will follower her the rest of her life and beyond. Justice was denied but the Crown made a deal . In the future another heinous crime may require that a deal be made. Seems to me the Crown may well find it's credibility in question . And that's a real problem .
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
Part of the deal, from your link, "Prosecutors gave Homolka immunity from prosecution in Jane Doe's rape on the eve of Homolka giving testimony at Bernardo's 1995 murder trial."
The deal did not include additional penalties or restrictions . Pile them on and there are those who will eventually label her a victim of government harassment . Quasi-liberarian , whatever, label it as you choose , it will happen.
Both she and her spawn of a husband deserve nothing but the death penalty ... period.
however, after making this deal, a video surfaced that showed that Karla was indeed an active participent in the torture and murder of her sister and others.....
this was fully known by the defense attorney, IIRC, who squelched the tape until after the plea bargain.....
how defense attorneys can live with themselves at times is beyond me.....
what women will do to "fit" in and to make the ones they love , love them back....
It's a fatal flaw that we have....
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