New York Post

arole for Mother’s ay killer

Family rage at ‘endless injustice’

- By CARL CAMPANILE

It’s just another sign of the softon-crime times, critics say.

A New York man who was convicted at age 15 of randomly raping and killing a 39-year-old mom on Mother’s Day in 1999 will be freed from prison this week — thanks to what critics call the state’s “procrimina­l’’ parole board.

“Thank God our parents are no longer here,” said Kirsten McElvene, the sister of victim Penny Brown, to WGRZ after the board’s ruling surfaced. “Thank God they’ve passed away, because this for sure would have killed them.”

Twisted teen Edward Kindt ambushed Brown, a nurse and married mom of two, while she was jogging with her two dogs in upstate Salamanca.

Kindt raped Brown and then strangled her with her dogs’ leashes. He was sentenced to nine years to life behind bars, the max at the time for criminals under age 16.

State legislator­s have since passed “Penny’s Law,” which calls for 15 years to life in prison for those under 16 who commit second-degree murder, as Kindt did.

A spokesman for the Parole Board confirmed that Kindt, who is now 39 and at the upstate Elmira Correction­al Facility, could be released on or before Wednesday, after several members of the Parole Board interviewe­d him Feb. 17 and decided to free him.

The rep would not immediatel­y provide names of the three parole board members who participat­ed in the decision to release Kindt.

Democratic Gov. Hochul appointed the chairman of the parole board, Darryl Towns, a former state assemblyma­n and housing commission­er, last year.

The other 13 members were selected by Democratic former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, though six are holdovers who have not been replaced by Hochul, according to agency records.

‘An extra lemon’

“It’s an extra lemon in the lemonade, I guess, that doesn’t have any sugar,” McElvene told WGRZ. “It is unbelievab­le to me. I just feel like. how can he come out the same age she was taken from us?

“I don’t think there’s reform for that,” she said of Kindt’s crime. “Even though he’s been in there for years, I just think that’s something that’s just there.”

Bradleigh Brown, one of Brown’s “heartbroke­n” daughters, wrote on Facebook, “This is a life sentence for our family and a mere 24 years for him.

“There are no words to describe the endless injustice we will endure. He took the spirits of so many people that day.

“Despite a violent sexual assault record, he is NOT being added to the sex offender registry,” Bradleigh added. “We are devastated and outraged, but want to relay this informatio­n to the public to bring whatever awareness we can to county residents.”

The Parole Board has come under fire in recent years for releasing convicted cop killers — including Anthony Bottom and Herman Bell, who in 1971 assassinat­ed NYPD officers Joseph Piagentini and Waverly Jones after luring them into a public housing complex in Harlem with a bogus 911 call.

Both killers were members of the Black Liberation Army terrorist organizati­on.

Critics say Democrats have shifted too far to the left in favor of criminals’ rights over crime victims’ and lawabiding citizens’, citing changes to the cashless bail and discovery laws and raising the age for criminal culpabilit­y.

State Sen. George Borrello, a Republican whose district includes Salamanca, told The Post on Monday, “The Democrats are in denial that there’s evil in the world. People who are rapists, murderers and cop killers are not easily [able to be rehabilita­ted], if at all. “The pro-criminal parole board is going to release him against the wishes of the victim’s family and despite being a risk to public safety,” Borrello said. “The Parole Board’s decision is reckless and an insult to Ms. Brown’s family and crime victims everywhere.” Cattaraugu­s County Sheriff Tim Whitcomb, who worked on the case as a young officer, told WGBR that Kindt’s murder of Brown “confirmed for me that the existence of evil is real.

“I’m angry about [his release], flatout,” Whitcomb said. “I’m very disappoint­ed with New York State Parole.” Hochul’s office had no immediate comment.

But state Republican Party chairman Ed Cox told The Post, “Edward Kindt should die in prison. “Justice demands it,” Cox said. “Democrats have flipped the rule of law on its head: Once again, the freedom of violent, remorseles­s criminals outweighs the safety of our communitie­s and justice for the families of victims.”

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 ?? ?? ‘UNBELIEVAB­LE’: Penny Brown (below) was raped and strangled by a 15-year-old Edward Kindt (left) on Mother’s Day in 1999. Kindt, now 39 — the same age Brown was when he killed her in upstate Salamanca — is set to be released from jail on parole, angering her family.
‘UNBELIEVAB­LE’: Penny Brown (below) was raped and strangled by a 15-year-old Edward Kindt (left) on Mother’s Day in 1999. Kindt, now 39 — the same age Brown was when he killed her in upstate Salamanca — is set to be released from jail on parole, angering her family.

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