Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

No Parole For 70 Years For Man Who Killed 3 Women In Ottawa Valley In 2015

The Canadian Press, 06 Dec, 2017 12:37 PM
    PEMBROKE, Ont. — A 60-year-old man convicted of killing three women during an hour-long rampage in the Ottawa Valley two years ago has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 70 years.
     
    Basil Borutski was convicted late last month of first-degree murder in the deaths of 36-year-old Anastasia Kuzyk and 48-year-old Nathalie Warmerdam, and of second-degree murder in slaying of Carol Culleton.
     
    Culleton was strangled with a television coaxial cable and Kuzyk and Warmerdam were both killed with a 12-gauge shotgun fired at close range. They all died within about an hour of each other at their residences in Renfrew County on the morning of Sept. 22, 2015.
     
    Court heard Borutski shot Kuzyk while she cowered behind her kitchen island and chased Warmerdam around her farmhouse before shooting her at point-blank range as she tried to run up the stairs.
     
    He broke into Culleton's cottage, picked up a coaxial cable and wrapped it around the 66-year-old's neck six times, the Crown told court.
     
    Justice Robert Maranger ruled Wednesday that Borutski will serve two consecutive life sentences — which each carry a parole ineligibilty of 25 years — for first-degree murder followed by at least 20 years of a life sentence for second-degree murder.
     
    The Crown had asked for the severe penalty at a sentencing hearing on Tuesday as families of Borutski's victims appealed to the judge to imprison him for life.
     
    "I beg the court to keep this man away from my family and society for the rest of his living days," Warmerdam's father Frank John Hopkins said in a statement read to the court.
     
    Borutski refused to make any comments or submissions and showed no emotion as the families of his three victims told of their heartbreak through victim impact statements.
     
    "There is a huge hole in our lives and our family. Daily we walk under a black cloud," said her mother Maz Tracey.
     
    Five impact statements were read in court Tuesday including one from Lorraine Wallace, a friend of Carol Culleton.
     
    "All her dreams cannot be realized because of you," she said. 
     
    A community impact statement read by Jennifer Valiquette and Joanne Brooks with End Violence Against Women in Renfrew County told how that September day in 2015 changed the lives of many.
     
    "For many in the violence against women community, September 22 is known as the Renfrew County massacre. They no longer feel safe walking on the rural roads or hiking in the bush."
     
    Prior to the murders, Borutski — who chose to forgo having a lawyer during the trial, but barely said a word during the proceedings — had twice spent time in jail after two of the women accused him of assault and uttering threats.
     
    Following his conviction, Leighann Burns, executive director of Ottawa-based women's shelter Harmony House, said Borutski's reputation as a violent and dangerous person was well-known in and around the Ontario community of Wilno, not far from where the three women lived.
     
    In a videotaped interview played at trial, Borutski expressed a degree of remorse for his actions, which he said were fuelled by rage at what he considered to be the lies and betrayals of his victims.
     
    In the video, he described how he was acting like a "zombie" on the day in question, saying he'd originally planned to take his own life, but decided against it because he believed it was wrong to take an innocent life.
     
    "I killed them because they were not innocent," Borutski says in the video. "They were guilty. I was innocent. I've done nothing wrong."
     
    He argued that Kuzyk and Warmerdam lied in court when they helped get him convicted of threatening and assaulting them and Culleton lied about her relationship with him and then shunned him for another man.
     
    "Borutski would have us cast some sort of biblical justification upon what is really nothing more than a callous, premeditated act of revenge, an act of murder in any way you define it," Crown attorney Jeffery Richardson said in his closing statement to the jury. "There is no justification for what he did."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Outreach Group Partners With App Developer To Improve Safety Of Sex Workers

    B.C. Outreach Group Partners With App Developer To Improve Safety Of Sex Workers
    VANCOUVER — An outreach group supporting vulnerable women in British Columbia is hoping a cellphone app designed to monitor remote workers in resource industries will help keep sex workers safe.

    B.C. Outreach Group Partners With App Developer To Improve Safety Of Sex Workers

    Saskatchewan Police Website Hacked By Apparent Supporters Of Islamic Militants

    Saskatchewan Police Website Hacked By Apparent Supporters Of Islamic Militants
    PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — Police in Prince Albert, Sask., say their website has been hacked by apparent supporters of ISIL.

    Saskatchewan Police Website Hacked By Apparent Supporters Of Islamic Militants

    Hit The Road: Alberta Landlord Wins Battle To Boot Squatter From Property

    Hit The Road: Alberta Landlord Wins Battle To Boot Squatter From Property
    CARDSTON, Alta. — A southern Alberta landlord has won his battle to remove a squatter living in a small shack sitting on a trailer on the man's rental property.

    Hit The Road: Alberta Landlord Wins Battle To Boot Squatter From Property

    Shame, Guilt And Disgust: Victims Of Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Give Emotional Impact Statements

    Shame, Guilt And Disgust: Victims Of Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Give Emotional Impact Statements
    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — Sex-assault victims of ex-ski coach Bertrand Charest delivered emotional impact statements Tuesday, with one telling the court he had robbed her of her childhood and acted like a predator.

    Shame, Guilt And Disgust: Victims Of Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Give Emotional Impact Statements

    English F-Word Acceptable For French Broadcasts, Regulator Says

    English F-Word Acceptable For French Broadcasts, Regulator Says
    Canada's broadcast standards regulator has ruled that a swear word that's off-limits on English-language broadcasts is acceptable in French programming.

    English F-Word Acceptable For French Broadcasts, Regulator Says

    Alberta Mounties Say Kidnapping Charges Pending After 5 Naked Suspects Arrested

    Alberta Mounties Say Kidnapping Charges Pending After 5 Naked Suspects Arrested
    NISKU, Alta. — Mounties say kidnapping charges are pending in a bizarre case just south of Edmonton involving a two-vehicle collision and suspects who were not wearing any clothes.

    Alberta Mounties Say Kidnapping Charges Pending After 5 Naked Suspects Arrested