Calgary Herald

Serial rapist granted day parole

- JONNY WAKEFIELD jwakefield@postmedia.com

Last month, the Parole Board of Canada granted day parole to Matthew Mcknight, the former Edmonton bar promoter serving an 11-year prison sentence for raping multiple women.

Mcknight's trial was one of the highest-profile Canadian sexual assault cases of the early Me Too era and among the longest in Edmonton's history. Here is a breakdown of the case and the parole board's justificat­ion for granting him early release.

WHO IS MCKNIGHT?

Originally from Vancouver, Mcknight attended business school in Edmonton and later worked as a promoter for now-defunct nightclubs, including The Old Strathcona Rack and Knoxville's Tavern.

He was known for wearing colourful onesies and dispensing free liquor in hopes of attracting young women to the establishm­ents. He also hosted after parties at his apartment, where multiple women said he sexually assaulted them.

In 2016, Edmonton police charged Mcknight with more than a dozen counts of sexual assault. He was eventually tried on 13 counts and convicted of five.

WHAT WAS THE EVIDENCE?

All the women who testified recalled Mcknight giving them alcohol. The five whose evidence the jury accepted described sudden, uncharacte­ristic blackouts before coming to in Mcknight's apartment, sometimes as he was assaulting them. They had little to no idea where they were or how they got there. Some were unable to move or speak.

Mcknight claimed the sexual encounters were consensual. He said he “hooked up” with 200-300 women between 2010 and 2016, but was neverthele­ss able to testify about the specific details of each encounter, including how much each person had to drink.

The Crown claimed Mcknight drugged some of the women, which trial Judge Doreen Sulyma ultimately rejected. Mcknight told court he would “go to my grave screaming out that I did not drug these women's drinks.”

WHAT WAS THE SENTENCE?

In July 2020, Sulyma sentenced Mcknight to eight years in prison for the five assaults, prompting outcry in the courtroom from victims and their supporters.

The Alberta Court of Appeal later increased Mcknight's sentence to 11 years, creating a sentence “lenient to the point of underminin­g public confidence in the administra­tion of justice.”

WHAT IS DAY PAROLE?

Except for life sentences, parole is typically available to federal offenders one-third of the way through their prison term. Inmates can apply for day parole either six months before they are eligible for full parole or six months into their sentence, whichever is longer.

The idea is to gradually reintegrat­e offenders into society before they can no longer be supervised by the correction­al system.

Day parole is usually served in a halfway house. Inmates on full parole can live in a private home. Both are subject to monitoring by parole supervisor­s.

Statutory release comes twothirds of the way through a sentence and is typically granted to all inmates.

WHAT IS MCKNIGHT'S RISK OF REOFFENDIN­G?

Mcknight underwent a variety of tests and was found to present an average risk of reoffendin­g relative to other sex offenders. The parole board noted he spent four years on bail and had no issues complying with “restrictiv­e” release conditions.

Mcknight's latest conditions include abstaining from alcohol and reporting any relationsh­ips with women. He told the parole board he is now “celibate.”

The parole board noted Mcknight has taken sex offender programmin­g and continues to have the support of family and friends.

The board said releasing Mcknight on day parole would not present an “undue risk” to the public.

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