Montreal Gazette

Report calls for better oversight of parolees

Investigat­ion launched after man allowed to visit sex worker, whom he later killed

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

Correction­al authoritie­s will change how federal offenders on day parole are managed in Quebec, following recommenda­tions in a report released Thursday into the murder of Marylène Levesque nearly one year ago.

A joint investigat­ion by correction­s and parole officials into the management of Eustachio Gallese's case found there were warning signs his case management team did not properly assess.

Levesque, 22, was found dead Jan. 22 in a Quebec City hotel room, stabbed numerous times by Gallese.

Gallese had met Levesque, a sex worker, in June 2019 during visits to an erotic massage parlour for sexual purposes — something he was granted permission to do by a parole officer, despite his history of domestic violence.

The permission was subsequent­ly revoked by the Parole Board of Canada in September 2019, but when he pleaded guilty to one count of first-degree murder last February, Gallese told a judge he didn't abide by the edict. Gallese was sentenced to life in prison without possibilit­y of parole for 25 years for Levesque's killing.

During that hearing, the court heard that Gallese began to develop a “certain attachment” to Levesque, but had become jealous and obsessed and feared rejection when he stabbed her 30 times before turning himself in hours later.

At the time, Gallese had been serving a sentence for second-degree murder in the killing of his ex-spouse in 2004.

Public Security Minister Bill Blair, who joined the heads of the Correction­al Service of Canada and the Parole Board to discuss the report Thursday, said Levesque's death was preventabl­e.

“The board of investigat­ion has identified shortcomin­gs in the case management and supervisio­n of the offender while he was in the community,” Blair told a virtual news conference.

“This was a terrible tragedy that should never have happened, and Correction­al Service of Canada and the Parole Board of Canada are taking very significan­t steps to make sure it never happens again.”

The head of the Correction­al Service of Canada said it does not approve delinquent­s having access to sexual services. Anne Kelly told a news conference that in 37 years at the service, it's not something she had heard of.

“The community supervisio­n strategy in this case was completely inappropri­ate,” Kelly said, noting a Canada-wide review of community release strategies was conducted after Levesque's killing.

In response to the report, the Correction­al Service of Canada says that it will be taking control of all aspects of community supervisio­n of federal offenders in Quebec to create a single system in the country.

Quebec was the only province where the model of supervisio­n allowed staff at community residentia­l facilities to supervise parolees — an arrangemen­t that had existed for 40 years.

But the report noted “the community supervisio­n model in place in Quebec led to shortcomin­gs in how this case was managed,” with confusion regarding roles and responsibi­lities between the halfway house and the correction­al service.

The supervisio­n of about 155 federal offenders in Quebec currently overseen by staff outside the Correction­al Service of Canada will revert to the federal agency.

“At this point, what I'd like to see is a uniform model across the country in terms of the supervisio­n of federal offenders in Canada,” Kelly said.

The federal correction­s agency oversees about 9,400 paroled offenders in communitie­s across the country, including about 2,000 in Quebec.

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