The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Killer gets leave for courses

- CHRIS LAMBIE clambie@herald.ca @tophlambie

The woman who helped murder Loretta Saunders in Halifax over six years ago is getting temporary passes from prison to take two programs over the next year on healthy relationsh­ips and understand­ing emotions.

The parole board has approved a total of 16 four-hour escorted temporary absences for Victoria Lea Henneberry to take the courses offered by the Elizabeth Fry Society. The Correction­al Service of Canada recommende­d the 35-year-old be allowed to take them.

“They conclude you would not present an undue risk to society while on the passes, noting your minimumsec­urity classifica­tion, limited prior criminal history, and psychologi­cal assessment­s of risk,” said the new parole board decision.

“They view the passes as desirable to continue to develop strategies through programmin­g to manage your need areas as part of a very gradual reintegrat­ion plan, given that you have completed the available programmin­g within the institutio­n.”

‘SIX FEET UNDER’

Loretta Saunders brother, Edmund, described the courses as an effort to "make sure that she don't put no more people like my sister six feet under."

He's resigned to the idea that Henneberry will get out of prison soon.

"I've tried to make my parents understand this. It don't matter what we think," Edmund Saunders said Thursday.

"I know how the justice system works. I've been around it a long time. If she follows the protocol they put before her, she's going to get whatever she wants."

He believes Henneberry "will be a free woman again" within five or six years.

BELIEVES SHE WILL BENEFIT

In her applicatio­n for the escorted temporary absences, Henneberry said she believes she will benefit from the two community programs. “The first, Healthy Relationsh­ips, will explore the skills necessary to develop healthy relationsh­ips and to understand boundaries in relationsh­ips,” said the parole board decision.

“In the Understand­ing Emotions course, you will address your identified deficits in managing problemati­c emotions, the developmen­t of self-control, and decisionma­king skills.”

COVID-19 RESTRICTIO­NS

Henneberry would have to travel to the courses in a government vehicle and the first pass will be with a primary worker. Subsequent passes may involve a staff member or trained citizen escort, said the decision. “The programs are not running currently due

to the COVID-19 restrictio­ns but approval of the (escorted temporary absences) is being requested to be available once the programs resume.”

Henneberry is serving a life sentence for the seconddegr­ee murder of Saunders, a young Inuit student from Labrador, in February 2014. Henneberry and her boyfriend Blake Leggette were subletting a room in Saunders' Cowie Hill Road apartment when the couple killed the Saint Mary's University student, who was pregnant, after she came to collect their rent.

“You and your co-accused allowed her to come into the apartment but then your coaccused attacked her from behind, attempting to choke her,” said Henneberry's parole decision.

“A struggle ensued with you and your co-accused attempting to suffocate the victim by placing plastic bags over her

head. Your co-accused banged the victim's head on the floor and she stopped moving. He then wrapped plastic wrap around her head and placed her in a hockey bag.”

The pair put Saunders in the trunk of her own car, and then using her bank card along the way, they drove to Salisbury, N.B., where they dumped her body in a treed area on the median of the Trans-canada Highway.

“The two of you then drove on to Ontario,” said the parole board decision.

“Your co-accused confessed to his involvemen­t in the murder to an undercover officer in February 2014, after which you were both arrested and returned to Halifax.”

The judge who sentenced Henneberry drew attention to the victim's young age and the fact that she was pregnant at the time of her murder, said the parole board decision. “He stated that the murder was planned and deliberate and that you contribute­d in the clean-up, the cover-up, and the escape from the area.”

Henneberry's case management team told the parole board she demonstrat­es “an unrealisti­c sense of entitlemen­t at times,” said the decision granting her temporary passes. “You state that you should not be serving a life sentence and should not be incarcerat­ed as there is nothing left for you to learn in prison and you should be released at your earliest eligibilit­y date.”

Henneberry has applied for day parole with a tentative hearing date in February 2021. “Since your hearing in February 2020, there was an incident where you punched a wall in anger following an interperso­nal issue with another offender and your (case management team) report you continue to engage in argumentat­ive behaviour. They believe you would benefit from additional insight into your offending as you continue to minimize your actions and when challenged, you apply external blame.”

Henneberry identifies as Indigenous, specifical­ly American Cherokee from her mother's side.

When she applied in February for escorted temporary absences, “a number of victim and community submission­s were presented that opposed your claim to Indigenous heritage and your access to related resources and supports.”

 ??  ?? Victoria Henneberry is escorted from a Halifax courtroom in July 2014. She and her boyfriend Blake Leggette are serving life sentences for killing Loretta Saunders.
Victoria Henneberry is escorted from a Halifax courtroom in July 2014. She and her boyfriend Blake Leggette are serving life sentences for killing Loretta Saunders.

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