Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Reena Virk Murder: Vancouver Teen Killer Kelly Ellard Seeks Day Parole After 18 Years

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 May, 2016 11:32 AM
    VANCOUVER — Almost two decades since an ostracized 14-year-old was swarmed, viciously beaten and then callously drowned near a Victoria bridge, Reena Virk's most notorious killer is asking for release.
     
    Kelly Ellard was 15 years old in November 1997 when she smashed Virk's head against a tree and then held the Grade 9 student's head underwater until she stopped moving.
     
    Ellard is scheduled to attend her first day-parole hearing on Tuesday, seven years after the Supreme Court of Canada rejected an appeal of her second-degree murder conviction.
     
    She has waived her right to a full parole hearing four times while serving her life sentence, but has remained eligible for day parole and applied for release several months ago.
     
    Ahead of the hearing, Virk's grandfather said the family no longer believes Ellard can redeem herself.
     
    "If she had admitted (her role) and if she had told the truth, then it would have been much better for our conscious, our pain, our satisfaction," said Mukand Pallan, 86, from his home in Victoria.
     
    "The way she behaved, we're very, very mad about it. It doesn't seem right, she's not a good girl, she doesn't deserve any help."
     
    Members of the Virk family showed compassion for many years towards Ellard, three others girls convicted of assault and Warren Glowatski, who was also found guilty of second-degree murder in the teen's death.
     
    They no longer believe Ellard, now 33, will change but will trust the federal parole board to make the correct decision, Pallan said.
     
    "It is very painful, but there's nothing too much we can do about it anymore."
     
    Virk's parents, Manjit and Suman, have taken a vacation in order to avoid media attention, Pallan added.
     
    The attack focused a national spotlight on bullying and teen violence, particularly among girls.
     
    The murder happened late in the evening after Virk joined a group of teens gathered outside a local school to drink and smoke pot. She was assaulted until bloody by several teens and then crossed a bridge, pleading to be left alone. Successive trials heard that Ellard and Glowatski followed.
     
    During Ellard's third trial, a pathologist testified Virk's brain was swollen and she suffered at least 18 forceful blows to her body. She died from drowning and her body was found adrift in a local inlet. 
     
    Ellard was put on trial for murder as an adult.
     
    A jury found her guilty during the first trial in 2000, but the verdict was overturned and a new trial ordered when the B.C. Court of Appeal determined the Crown had conducted cross-examination improperly.
     
    She testified during her second trial in 2004, sobbing and insisting she "never crossed the bridge." The jury was unable to reach a verdict.
     
     
    Ellard didn't testify during her third trial in 2005. She was convicted and then won an appeal, but Canada's highest court rejected the case and restored the conviction.
     
    She has run into other trouble since Virk's death.
     
    Ellard's bail was revoked in 2004 while she was living in a halfway house awaiting trial. She was charged with assault causing bodily harm of an older woman in a New Westminster park. The charges were stayed after she was found guilty in the Virk trial.
     
    Court documents in 2005 said Ellard was a belligerent and often abusive inmate, who had violent outbursts that included throwing food and kicking chairs.
     
    She was portrayed as having a fragile mental state as a result of her prison time during her sentencing hearing.
     
    At the time, her mother Susan Pakos told the judge her daughter "has suffered more publicly and privately than anyone can ever imagine."
     
    Her lawyer Peter Wilson described her as "a person everyone loves to hate."
     
    Should Ellard's request for parole be granted, she would be placed under a release plan that includes a requirement she live in a halfway house, a parole official said.
     
    A release plan usually includes a series of conditions attached to the parole board's risk assessment, such as abstaining from intoxicants and avoiding criminally active peers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Pedophile 'Swirl Face' Promises Change, Apologizes To Victims In Cambodia

    B.C. Pedophile 'Swirl Face' Promises Change, Apologizes To Victims In Cambodia
    Christopher Neil told a B.C. Supreme Court that he no longer believes sex with children is acceptable "anywhere in the world" at the conclusion of his sentencing hearing. He pleaded guilty in December to five child-sex crimes.

    B.C. Pedophile 'Swirl Face' Promises Change, Apologizes To Victims In Cambodia

    Zee TV Boss Subhash Chandra Gets Award From Canada-India Foundation In Toronto

    Zee TV Boss Subhash Chandra Gets Award From Canada-India Foundation In Toronto
    Zee TV and Essel Group chairman Subhash Chandra on Saturday received the $50,000 Global Indian Award from the Canada-India Foundation.

    Zee TV Boss Subhash Chandra Gets Award From Canada-India Foundation In Toronto

    Surge In Storefront Pot Dispensaries Has Caught Some Municipalities By Surprise

    Surge In Storefront Pot Dispensaries Has Caught Some Municipalities By Surprise
    The Canadian Association of Medical Cannabis Dispensaries estimates there are at least 350 such storefronts in Canada, with dozens opening in Toronto alone in the past few months.  

    Surge In Storefront Pot Dispensaries Has Caught Some Municipalities By Surprise

    Medical Schools Preparing To Teach Future Doctors About Assisted Death

    Medical Schools Preparing To Teach Future Doctors About Assisted Death
    TORONTO — With physician-assisted death soon to forever alter the face of medicine, Canada's medical schools are under pressure to decide at what point in the curriculum future doctors should be introduced to this paradigm shift — and what that teaching needs to entail.

    Medical Schools Preparing To Teach Future Doctors About Assisted Death

    East Coast Organic Marijuana Producer Ramps Up To Serve Vast Legalized Market

    East Coast Organic Marijuana Producer Ramps Up To Serve Vast Legalized Market
    MONCTON, N.B. — Denis Arsenault hosted an important visitor the other day at his Moncton offices, a moment that revealed much about his company's grand ambitions.

    East Coast Organic Marijuana Producer Ramps Up To Serve Vast Legalized Market

    Organized Crime 'may Infiltrate' New Pot Regime, Internal Federal Paper Warns

    Organized Crime 'may Infiltrate' New Pot Regime, Internal Federal Paper Warns
    OTTAWA — Legalizing marijuana won't automatically make Canada's black market for weed go up in smoke or banish organized crime, warns a draft federal discussion paper on regulation of the drug.

    Organized Crime 'may Infiltrate' New Pot Regime, Internal Federal Paper Warns