Medicine Hat News

Parole period lengthened in triple murder of Alberta family

- BILL GRAVELAND

CALGARY

The Alberta Court of Appeal has ruled that a trial judge erred by not applying consecutiv­e parole eligibilit­ies for two men convicted in the slayings of three family members.

Jason Klaus and Joshua Frank must now serve a minimum 50 years in prison before they can apply for release.

“The motives, the planning and deliberati­on and the calculated magnitude of these crimes is such that they stand out and indicate that denunciati­on in these cases requires what may amount to whole life sentences for both Klaus and Frank,” Justice Jack Watson wrote for the majority in a split decision released Monday.

Klaus and Frank were each convicted of three counts of first-degree murder and sentenced to life without parole eligibilit­y for 25 years.

The bodies of Klaus’s father and sister, Gordon and Monica Klaus, were discovered in their burned-out farmhouse near Castor, east of Red Deer, in 2013.

The body of his mother, Sandra Klaus, was never found but police believed she also died in the home.

“The errors of principle found in the sentencing reasons require the Court of Appeal to sentence afresh. We are persuaded that, in the end, the dispositio­n reached was disproport­ionate and unfit,” said the decision.

The Appeal Court said that the sentence in the killings of Gordon and Sandra Klaus should be served concurrent­ly but the murder of their daughter warranted an additional 25 years of parole ineligibil­ity.

The Crown had asked for no parole eligibilit­y for 75 years, arguing that the trial judge, Justice Eric Macklin, failed to address deterrence and aggravatin­g and mitigating factors

Justice Frans Slatter cast a dissenting vote, meaning the decision can be appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Slatter said the multiple murders provision in the Criminal Code, which allows for consecutiv­e parole ineligibil­ity periods, “does not apply in cases of conviction­s for murder entered at the same trial.”

The trial heard Klaus was having problems with his father and offered Frank money to kill the family. Frank told police he killed the family because he was scared Klaus would shoot him if he didn’t follow through.

Klaus also had a cocaine and gambling addiction and forged cheques on his parents’ account.

Macklin ruled that factors in the case were not particular­ly uncommon, compared with other murders, and did not warrant consecutiv­e sentences. He also suggested that the two men would have a better chance of rehabilita­tion if they were not “bereft of hope.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Marilyn Thompson, in red, sister of Gordon Klaus, leaves court with family and friends after Joshua Frank and Jason Klaus were sentenced in Red Deer in 2018.
CP FILE PHOTO Marilyn Thompson, in red, sister of Gordon Klaus, leaves court with family and friends after Joshua Frank and Jason Klaus were sentenced in Red Deer in 2018.

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