Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Reena Virk’s Killer Kelly Ellard Has Day Parole Extended By Six Months

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Aug, 2019 08:14 PM

    VANCOUVER - The Parole Board of Canada has granted overnight leaves and extended day parole for a British Columbia woman convicted in the 1997 swarming and murder of Victoria teenager Reena Virk.

     

    The board says Kelly Ellard, who now goes by Kerry Marie Sim, has show "sustained positive change" since her conviction and life sentence in 2005 for the second-degree murder of the 14-year-old.

     

    Ellard, who is now in her late 30s, received day parole in November 2017, shortly after the birth of a child she conceived during a conjugal visit with her boyfriend.

     

    The board has extended parole in six-month increments since then, and its latest decision authorizes overnight leaves, although it notes her continuing relationship with the child's father, also a convicted criminal, still requires monitoring.

     

    The board ruling, issued late last month but just released to the media, says Ellard is coping well with several sources of stress, and any risk to the public continues to be manageable.

     

    Ellard must still abide by several conditions, including abstaining from alcohol and drugs, and she is not permitted any contact with Virk's family.

     

    "The deceased victim's family has suffered the violent loss of their child, and they have the right to live their lives without any concern of unwanted contact from you," the two-member parole board panel writes.

     

    Ellard was 15 at the time of Virk's murder, but was sentenced as an adult. She was convicted at her third trial in 2005 after a B.C. Court of Appeal decision set aside the guilty verdict in her first trial and her second trial ended with a deadlocked jury.

     

    Court was told Ellard and several other teens swarmed and beat Virk before Ellard and a teenage boy held her head underwater until she drowned.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Driver Charged After Going 107 Kilometres Over Speed Limit On Abbotsford Highway

    New Driver Charged After Going 107 Kilometres Over Speed Limit On Abbotsford Highway
    An 18-year-old male (“N” driver) has been charged with excessive speeding after being caught allegedly driving 187 km/hr on Highway 11.

    New Driver Charged After Going 107 Kilometres Over Speed Limit On Abbotsford Highway

    Once Driven Near Extinction, Wild Turkeys Making Themselves At Home In Quebec

    They arrived a few years ago — three-foot tall, bare-headed visitors that would occasionally stare intently at residents from their balconies and yards.

    Once Driven Near Extinction, Wild Turkeys Making Themselves At Home In Quebec

    Forest Fire Threatening Pikangikum Grows In Size, Airlifts Continue

    Forest Fire Threatening Pikangikum Grows In Size, Airlifts Continue
    A forest fire threatening a First Nation in northwestern Ontario has grown in size, officials said Thursday as more flights were planned to airlift residents out of the community.

    Forest Fire Threatening Pikangikum Grows In Size, Airlifts Continue

    More 'Work To Do' To Mobilize Canadians On Climate Change Action: Trudeau

    More 'Work To Do' To Mobilize Canadians On Climate Change Action: Trudeau
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he has more work to do to sell Canadians on his vision for more action to fight climate change.

    More 'Work To Do' To Mobilize Canadians On Climate Change Action: Trudeau

    B.C.'s New Speculation Tax Funnels $115 Million Into Affordable Housing

    The British Columbia government says its new speculation and vacancy tax has pumped $115 million into a fund to create more affordable housing.

    B.C.'s New Speculation Tax Funnels $115 Million Into Affordable Housing

    Big, Old B.C. Trees Produce Mutations Over Time That Could Improve Success: UBC

    Big, Old B.C. Trees Produce Mutations Over Time That Could Improve Success: UBC
    VICTORIA - Researchers collected DNA from the tops of some of Canada's tallest trees to search for mutations that could provide evidence of how the ancient forest giants evolve to survive.

    Big, Old B.C. Trees Produce Mutations Over Time That Could Improve Success: UBC