Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Woman Convicted In Stefanie Rengel's Killing Has Day Parole Revoked

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Aug, 2019 08:07 PM

    KITCHENER, Ont. - A young woman who pressured her boyfriend to kill his teenage ex more than a decade ago had her day parole revoked Friday after she became entangled in a love triangle with two former inmates outside prison.

     

    The Parole Board of Canada determined Melissa Todorovic should remain behind bars after hearing she had failed to disclose two romantic relationships, breaching one of the conditions of her release.

     

    During a hearing at the Grand Valley Institution for Women in Kitchener, Ont., the board heard from one of Todorovic's parole officers that the young woman began a relationship with a man who was on probation, then later became involved with his friend.

     

    "She appeared to be manipulating them against one another," telling the first man he was not satisfying her sexually and complaining about it to the second, the parole officer, Angela Law, told the board.

     

    Todorovic's behaviour "raises concerns about her judgment and her ability to manipulate," Law said.

     

    Todorovic was granted six months of day parole in November after the board found she had made progress in understanding what led her to orchestrate the 2008 killing of 14-year-old Stefanie Rengel.

     

    The panel also said at the time that Todorovic should expect to remain in counselling for a long time and required her to report any close relationship to her parole officer.

     

    Todorovic moved to a halfway house in Brampton, Ont., and met the two men at a program meant to help offenders reintegrate the community, it heard. She began dating one of them and confided in the other about her relationship troubles, the board heard.

     

    Her day parole was suspended in March after her clandestine relationships came to light through one of the men's probation officer, the board heard. Friday's hearing aimed to determine whether she should be allowed to resume day parole.

     

    Todorovic said Friday she knew it was wrong to hide her relationships but denied manipulating or controlling the two men.

     

    She attributed her actions to feeling isolated and overwhelmed by the adjustment to life outside prison and acknowledged that neither relationship was healthy.

     

    "I was lonely when I was out there," she said. "I liked people complimenting me and giving me attention and I didn't want it to end."

     

    The parole board panelist, however, called it "very, very, very concerning" that Todorovic was engaging in behaviours similar to those that led to her crime so soon after moving to a halfway house.

     

    Shannon Stewart noted Todorovic showed insight into her actions and benefited from a strong support network yet still carried out a "calculated deception."

     

    "If you didn't want to commit another crime, then you wouldn't have knowingly engaged in your offence cycle," she said.

     

    Todorovic was convicted of first-degree murder in 2009 for ordering the slaying of Rengel, a Toronto teen who had become the focus of her intense jealousy even though the two had never met.

     

    Fuelling this obsession was the fact that Rengel had briefly dated Todorovic's then-boyfriend, David Bagshaw, years earlier.

     

    Todorovic, who was 15 at the time, repeatedly threatened to break up with Bagshaw or withhold sex unless he killed Rengel. He eventually carried out the

     

    murder plot, luring the teen out of her home on New Year's Day 2008 and stabbing her six times.

    Both Todorovic and Bagshaw were sentenced as adults to life in prison, with parole eligibility set at seven years for Todorovic and 10 years for Bagshaw, who was just a few days shy of his 18th birthday at the time of the murder.

     

    Todorovic appealed her conviction and sentence but both were upheld. The process delayed her application for parole, however, and the board has said she became eligible for day parole in 2013 and full parole in 2015.

     

    Rengel's relatives had questioned the sincerity of Todorovic's remorse when she was granted day parole last year, and said Friday the young woman had proven them right.

     

    "The fact that Melissa, in just a few short months, was unable to abide by her very limited conditions raises red flags that are, frankly, terrifying," Rengel's mother, Patricia Hung, said in a victim impact statement.

     

    "I had so hoped, for her own sake and others', that she would grow into a woman capable of sound moral decisions...and compensate in some way for the harm she caused so many," she said. "Part of me is very sad for her. I am also very afraid."

     

    Hung expressed relief at the board's decision to return Todorovic to prison. Todorovic had asked to resume day parole, this time at a halfway house in Kingston rather than Brampton, Ont.

     

    Todorovic's lawyer argued it was unreasonable to expect someone who grew up in prison to reintegrate in the community without "bumps in the road."

     

    He suggested his client did not feel she could confide in her parole officer and did not want to discuss her sex life with her mother. He added Todorovic, who said she was recently diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder, is "an outsider in a lot of ways."

     

    Todorovic has two months to appeal the panel's decision. Otherwise, the board is not required to review her eligibility for day parole for a year.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Independent Investigation Begins Into Langley RCMP Response To Langley Teen Carson Crimeni's Death

    The office that looks into all cases of police-involved deaths or serious injuries in British Columbia says it is examining what role two Langley RCMP officers may have played in the death of a 14-year-old boy

    Independent Investigation Begins Into Langley RCMP Response To Langley Teen Carson Crimeni's Death

    B.C. Father Takes Stand At Trial, Denies Killing Daughters And Attempting Suicide

    A Vancouver Island man testified Wednesday that he didn't kill his two daughters and denied he tried to take his own life on the day they died.

    B.C. Father Takes Stand At Trial, Denies Killing Daughters And Attempting Suicide

    Border Official Questioned Meng On Alleged Business In Iran: Court Documents

    VANCOUVER - Court documents released ahead of a Huawei executive's extradition trial suggest a Canadian border official questioned Meng Wanzhou about her business before RCMP arrested her.

    Border Official Questioned Meng On Alleged Business In Iran: Court Documents

    RCMP Originally Planned To Arrest Meng Wanzhou On Plane, Defence Lawyers Say

    RCMP Originally Planned To Arrest Meng Wanzhou On Plane, Defence Lawyers Say
    In court documents released Tuesday, the defence alleges a "co-ordinated strategy" to have the RCMP delay the arrest, so that border officials could question Meng under the pretence of a "routine immigration check."    

    RCMP Originally Planned To Arrest Meng Wanzhou On Plane, Defence Lawyers Say

    Ontario Government Releases Updated Sexual-Education Curriculum

    Ontario Government Releases Updated Sexual-Education Curriculum
    The Ontario government has released the new sexual-education curriculum, replacing a much-criticized teaching plan brought in after the Progressive Conservatives took power last year.

    Ontario Government Releases Updated Sexual-Education Curriculum

    Cases Against Two St. Mike's Students Accused In Alleged Sex Assaults Concluded

    Cases Against Two St. Mike's Students Accused In Alleged Sex Assaults Concluded
    TORONTO - The cases against two students accused in alleged sex assaults at a private Toronto school have concluded.    

    Cases Against Two St. Mike's Students Accused In Alleged Sex Assaults Concluded