National Post

Drunk driver denied quest for early parole

- Paola loRiggio

GRAVENHURS­T, ONT. • A drunk driver who killed three young children and their grandfathe­r in a crash north of Toronto continues to minimize his problems with alcohol and must address the issue before he can be released into the community, a parole board panel ruled Wednesday.

By underestim­ating his misuse of alcohol, Marco Muzzo is sabotaging the progress he could be making while behind bars, members of the Parole Board of Canada said in denying the 32-year-old both day and full parole.

“We don’t question your remorse,” board member Kevin Corcoran said in a hearing at the Beaver Creek prison in Gravenhurs­t, Ont. “It’s obvious that this is a very difficult thing for you to deal with.”

However, he said, “we have to be mindful that your actions caused the deaths of four people.”

Muzzo, who was sentenced to 10 years in prison in 2016 after a guilty plea in the crash, can appeal the ruling in the next two months or reapply for parole in a year.

During an emotional hearing that spanned roughly three hours, he was pressed on his drinking habits prior to the September 2015 collision and his record of driving infraction­s, many of them for speeding.

Muzzo, who showed little emotion through most of the questionin­g, was confronted with a 2012 incident that saw him charged with public intoxicati­on after he threatened a bouncer at a strip club and tried to kick out the windows of a police cruiser after his arrest.

The incident was not mentioned during his trial and the panel said it had only recently come to the attention of Muzzo’s case management team, noting it suggested a lack of transparen­cy on his part.

Muzzo insisted it was an isolated incident, that he seldom drank and only to excess on birthdays and other festive occasions. Corcoran disagreed.

“This speaks to a history,” the parole board member said.

The panel also said it appeared police officers had reduced several of Muzzo’s speeding tickets, meaning he would never have received demerit points or lost his licence. As a result, the panel said, Muzzo never faced consequenc­es that might have changed his behaviour or attitude toward driving.

Muzzo pleaded guilty to four counts of impaired driving causing death and two counts of impaired driving causing bodily harm in the crash.

The collision in Vaughan, Ont., claimed the lives of nine-year-old Daniel Neville-Lake, his five-year-old brother Harrison, their twoyear-old sister Milly and the children’s 65-year-old grandfathe­r, Gary Neville.

The mother of the children Muzzo killed told the hearing that his expression­s of remorse rung hollow as he had sought parole at the first opportunit­y.

“I don’t and won’t get the chance for parole from this life sentence of misery and despair,” said Jennifer Neville-Lake.

She described coming home to an empty house every day and said hearing the sound of other children laughing can trigger a wave of grief.

Muzzo appeared emotional during her statement and seemed to wipe away tears on at least one occasion.

 ?? FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jennifer Neville-Lake holds a photo of her late daughter Milly at a parole hearing on Wednesday.
FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS Jennifer Neville-Lake holds a photo of her late daughter Milly at a parole hearing on Wednesday.

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