The Province

Parole hearing for murderer infuriates victim’s family

- LOUISE DICKSON

VICTORIA — The aunt of a Vancouver Island teen murdered 10 years ago is outraged that a parole hearing for Kimberly Proctor’s killer is going ahead despite the fact that neither the family nor the media will be present due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Kruse Wellwood’s hearing for day parole and escorted temporary absences from the medium-security Mission Institutio­n prison should be shut down, Jo-Anne Landolt said Thursday.

“Why are we even doing hearings at this time when everything is closed down? Why are we still allowing offenders a say as to their hearings? It puts even more of a burden on the victims.”

In March 2010, Wellwood, then 16, and Cameron Moffat, 17, lured Kimberly, a Grade 12 student, to Wellwood’s home in Langford, tied her up, gagged her, sexually assaulted her, beat her, suffocated her and mutilated her body with a knife over several hours.

They then put her body in a freezer. The next day, they travelled to the Galloping Goose Trail and set the body on fire. Kimberly’s badly burned body was found under a bridge on the Galloping Goose Trail on March 19, 2010.

The teens pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and were given a life sentence with no possibilit­y of parole for 10 years.

They were both eligible for day parole in 2018. Moffat has waived his right to a parole hearing.

The Proctor family was shocked when Wellwood applied for day parole and escorted temporary absences. The parole board denied his request at a hearing in August 2019.

Landolt said she’s unhappy and stressed about going through another parole hearing not even a year later, and so soon after the 10th anniversar­y of her niece’s murder on March 18. She said because of the pandemic, the family couldn’t even get together to mark the anniversar­y.

“I haven’t seen my family for two months because of the virus,” said Landolt, noting that last year the family attended the hearing together. “This is a time we should be there. You should be able to support your family.”

Family members including Kimberly’s parents, Fred and Lucia Proctor, and grandmothe­r Linda Proctor, will be able to listen to the hearing on a conference call, but Landolt doesn’t think that’s good enough.

“I want to be able to see him. You can get a lot of sense of an offender when you see his demeanour. You get a sense of what was going through his monstrous mind,” said Landolt.

“We’re not talking about a petty crime. This was a horrific, brutal crime.” Landolt said the family has the right to be present for the hearing and the media should also be there to ensure the story stays in the public eye.

“We don’t want people to forget what happened to Kimmy. There are new people coming into the community who don’t know what happened and they should know,” Landolt added.

She has submitted her victim-impact statement by video because she wants the National Parole Board members to see her.

Since Kimberly’s murder, her family has been advocating for reforms to help prevent what happened to her from happening to anyone else.

They have proposed mandatory treatment and counsellin­g for any young person who is identified as a threat, calling it “Kimberly’s law.”

“We’re still trying to get the provincial government to listen to us,” said Linda Proctor.

“We’ve been fighting this for 10 years and we’ll continue.”

 ??  ?? CAMERON MOFFAT
KRUSE WELLWOOD
CAMERON MOFFAT KRUSE WELLWOOD
 ??  ?? KIMBERLY PROCTOR
KIMBERLY PROCTOR

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