Lethbridge Herald

Workload, training flagged in investigat­ion into release of Sask. mass killer

- Kelly Geraldine Malone

An investigat­ion into the statutory release of a man months before he went on a stabbing rampage in Saskatchew­an has made 14 recommenda­tions, including more time for parole board members to handle cases and domestic violence training for correction­s staff.

The joint investigat­ion into Myles Sanderson was launched soon after the mass stabbing on the James Smith Cree Nation and in the nearby village of Weldon in 2022. Eleven people were killed and 17 others injured as Sanderson went door to door attacking people.

Sanderson, 32, died in police custody a few days after the killings.

Sanderson, who had a record of violent assaults, had received statutory release earlier that year. The killings raised questions about why he was released and how he managed to remain free in the months leading up to the attacks.

The investigat­ion’s final report concluded there were no indicators or precipitat­ing events that could have prompted staff with the Correction­al Service of Canada and Parole Board of Canada to act. It also found the overall case preparatio­n leading up to Sanderson’s release was “reasonable and appropriat­e.”

The partially redacted report did note some deficienci­es, including how Sanderson’s mental health was managed and assessed during his time in federal custody.

The correction­al service and the parole board said in a news release that the recommenda­tions were accepted and work is underway to address them.

“What these families and communitie­s have gone through is unimaginab­le,” Anne Kelly, commission­er of the correction­al service, said in a statement. “And we know that getting answers on how such a thing could happen is an important part of their healing process.”

Ten of the recommenda­tions were directed at the parole board, including reviewing scheduling guidelines to allow members more time to prepare for hearings and write decisions after.

“Time constraint pressures were identified consistent­ly and presented a theme, which appeared to have become normal and an acceptable work culture,” the report said.

Jennifer Oades, who chairs the parole board, said in a statement that the board has taken steps to manage members’ workload so they have time to write decisions.

Four recommenda­tions were directed at the Correction­al Service of Canada, including developing policy to address concerns about suicide for offenders under community supervisio­n and domestic violence training for staff involved in assessing risk levels of offenders.

The report noted the chief of mentalheal­th services at the Saskatchew­an Penitentia­ry said there were not enough resources in place to complete self-injury assessment­s on every inmate who needed one.

The report also recommende­d the correction­al service consider the possibilit­y of reinstatin­g the community correction­s liaison officer program, which was eliminated in 2015. That program provided dedicated policing support to help community parole officers.

The report said parole officers expressed concern that they gave informatio­n to police agencies about Sanderson when he was on the run, but never got any updates in return.

“All communicat­ions were one-way,” the report said.

Sanderson’s parole documents show he had a lengthy criminal history, including 59 conviction­s as an adult. He received statutory release in August 2021 from his first federal prison sentence of more than four years. Statutory release kicks in when an offender has served two-thirds of a prison sentence.

Four months into his freedom, Sanderson was found to have been lying about his living arrangemen­ts and his release was suspended.

In February 2022, the parole board cancelled that suspension and Sanderson again received statutory release with a reprimand. Three months later, however, a parole officer issued a warrant for his apprehensi­on and he was unlawfully at large.

The report noted in the following months, the parole officer repeatedly called people who knew Sanderson, one of whom said he may be hiding on the James Smith Cree Nation.

The parole officer contacted the RCMP detachment in Melfort, but Mounties never provided informatio­n to the parole officer about what, if anything, was learned about Sanderson’s whereabout­s.

Chief Wally Burns of the James Smith band, one of three that make up the First Nation, said he’s disappoint­ed the community was excluded from the process.

“Canada chose to do an investigat­ion and make recommenda­tions focused on Indigenous inmates without us,” Burns said in a news release. “That speaks volumes to us when one of our band members was the perpetrato­r, and it’s our people who died in the massacre.”

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