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Observers divided over Latimer parole decision
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CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Thu. Dec. 6 2007 9:22 AM ET
Robert Latimer's continued refusal to show contrition or feel guilt for killing his 12-year-old daughter in 1993 is upsetting to one advocate for the rights of people with disabilities.
Latimer, currently serving a life sentence for killing his severely disabled daughter, was denied day parole on Wednesday.
The chair of the National Parole Board panel at B.C.'s minimum-security William Head prison, located near Victoria, told Latimer "we were left with a feeling that you have not developed the kind of sufficient insight and understanding of your actions."
Grant Mitchell, the lawyer who represented a coalition of disabled groups for seven years on the case, told CTV's Canada AM he is disappointed Latimer hasn't changed his position.
"I think it's really sad that he's still maintaining that he committed no crime ... that killing a member of his family was a private matter that the public had no business getting involved in," Mitchell said on Thursday.
"And I think it's particularly concerning that when he was asked by the Parole Board whether he would do the same thing if another member of his family were in distress, he said he wasn't sure what he would do."
Latimer chose not to appear before the Parole Board with a lawyer.
The Saskatchewan farmer's daughter, Tracy, was born with cerebral palsy and in 1993 was facing another operation to fix a permanently dislocated hip.
While his wife and kids were at church, Latimer put Tracy in the cab of his pickup and pumped exhaust fumes into the vehicle.
Tracy, who could neither walk nor talk, had the mental age of a three-month-old child.
In 1994, a jury found him guilty of second-degree murder, but the decision was wiped out later by the Supreme Court. In 1997, a second guilty verdict was upheld despite an appeal.
On Wednesday, when the Parole Board members pressed Latimer on whether he would take the same action if a family member was terminally ill, he answered: "I don't think so."
Arthur Schafer, director of the University of Manitoba's Centre for Professional and Applied Ethics, said he wasn't surprised by the verdict.
"From my perspective, the justice system has been rigid, inflexible and lacking in both justice and humanity right from the outset of this case. So to see the injustice perpetuated isn't so surprising," he told Canada AM.
He suggested that the Board denied day-parole to Latimer because he refused to "grovel" during his appearance.
Alan Borovoy, general counsel for the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, was outraged by the decision and said Latimer could not have shown remorse for his actions, because he had acted on compassionate grounds.
"Who could expect him to go through all this, the ritual of contrition, in order to satisfy (the Parole Board) that he has changed his mind about something that was so important to him in the first place," Borovoy told CTV Newsnet.
"This is tantamount to saying, 'Robert Latimer, tell us that you would much prefer that your daughter be suffering unremitting pain now than the result that has already occurred.'"
Latimer, who began serving his sentence in January 2001, will be eligible to re-apply for day parole in two years.
In a 2006 interview with The Canadian Press, Latimer said he had no regrets about what he did to his daughter.
"The law is a very stupid thing when it comes to trying to sort these things out," he said. "They don't have any realistic appreciation of what is going on."
In prison, Latimer has taken electrician and carpenter courses and even managed to run his farm with the help of a manager.
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Canada AM is a production of CTV News, and is Canada’s most-watched morning news program.
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Bill F
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People who can function in society deserve all the support we can give them, and they can definitely live meaningful lives. But there are some diseases that are crippling to no extent, and do not offer very much hope in future recovery. This case is a perfect example of this.
The justice system IS rigid to provide fairness when dealing with crimes. Many people do not see what Latimer did as a crime. Me being one of them.
Im not suggesting we should kill all people with crippling illnesses, because if that were true, I would be dead. But we must treat every case like this with care, and understand that the justice system is not perfect.
Wayne
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Marc
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Anne-Marie Ventura
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That he refused to say in front of the parole board what they wanted to hear is all to his honor. Shame on this punitive and inflexible justice system with its power-tripping little dictators and the whole lobby for the so-called protection of disabled people who, by the way, were certainly not there when he and his family needed help in the care of their poor daughter!
Allan Eizinas
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The Saskatchewan farmer now remains in jail and his 3 other children continue to await his return.
This is the result of mandatory minimum sentencing and a glimpse into the future Harper vision for Canada if we ever give him a majority.
Steve
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MJ in NB
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I neither condone or condemn what Mr. Latimer did. Like most, I only know of his actions through media reports which at best, provide limited information, and are at worst, sensationalistic and one-sided.
Wrong decision
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The disconnect that exists between our laws (which are designed to protect our morals and values!) and what currently exists is truly horrifying.
Christopher
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Victor Levy
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My wife and I have promised each other that no machine will ever keep us alive. Should my child have been born with no possibility to live a happy, pain free, productive life and the mental level of a three month old at the age of 12 YEARS...........................
Tom
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Though this man is no threat to society he is denied parole while calculating rapists and murderers are set free often before they serve their full sentence.
dp
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Please, let's all show the proper amount of respect for the value of life, while appreciating that the majority of us are lucky enough to not understand the impact of the situation that this family was in.
Alex
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Glenn Reid
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Mike
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Brian Henson
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Is that what justice is becoming--a way for all who violate the laws of the land to "show" that they are the "victims" of these "laws", and therefore, not, in any way responsible for their actions, and must be able to show that the verdict, itself, was in fault, along with the sentencing, for making them endure such hardships, when, "in fact" (according to them) they did "nothing" wrong, period?
Of course, even David Milgaard refused to show "remorse" for the "crime" that he was found guilty of, and after serving 23 years in prison, was "pardoned" for what had happened to him.
That leaves us with one basic question: "What, indeed, is justice?"
Does the "verdict" and "sentencing" always stand up to the test, even if the person admitted to the "crime", when stating that nothing "wrong" was done?
Bill
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dwayne-ottawa
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Jimmy
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Ian
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