Medicine Hat News

Parole board refuses release of serial killer Allan Legere

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The Parole Board of Canada refused on Wednesday to release serial killer Allan Legere after hearing him blame others for the murders he committed and argue he could safely return to New Brunswick.

The convicted murderer, rapist and arsonist, who will turn 73 in February, escaped from custody on May 3, 1989, while serving a life sentence for the murder of store owner John Glendennin­g during a June 1986 robbery.

Legere carried out four more brutal murders, several arsons and a sexual assault in the Miramichi area before being recaptured on Nov. 24 of that year.

“Your offending is of the most serious nature; the victim harm is still felt to this day,” board member Delaine Dew said during the oral decision to deny parole, which came following Wednesday’s hearing.

Known as “the Monster of the Miramichi,” Legere is serving a life sentence in Edmonton, and he has no mandatory release date. He’s been eligible to apply for day parole since November 2012 and for full parole since November 2015.

Dew said Legere was rejected for parole because he remained a risk to the community. During the hearing, Legere said he had hoped to move to the Fredericto­n area, about 170 kilometres from the scene of his crimes, as he had support from family there.

Legere said he realized this would likely draw a negative reaction from Miramichi residents, and he said on several occasions during the hearing that people should consider being merciful to him.

“People have this revenge thing. ‘Cage him forever.’ But if you don’t forgive, you can’t be forgiven,” he told the board members during his hearing.

Legere’s answers, however, often strayed far from the questions asked by Dew and fellow board member Amy Agar, who repeatedly pressed the killer to indicate how accountabl­e he felt for his violence.

More than three decades after the murders, the inmate continues to say that others committed the killings that led to his life sentences, only admitting to being “present” at the scenes of gruesome and bloody beatings — sometimes, he said, simply by coincidenc­e.

In the case of the 1986 murder of Glendennin­g, he claimed he hadn’t directly participat­ed in the killing of the storekeepe­r, but rather, that two accomplice­s had suffocated the victim. Glendennin­g’s wife, Mary, was also savagely beaten and sexually assaulted.

During his months on the loose, Legere killed Annie Flam, an elderly store owner; Donna and Linda Daughney, two middle-aged sisters, setting fire to their home before leaving; and Rev. James Smith, a Roman Catholic priest.

He was recaptured on Nov. 24, 1989, after a failed carjacking that began in Saint John, N.B., and came to an end just outside Rogersvill­e, where police arrested him in the cab of a tractor trailer.

Legere blamed his behaviour on drinking too much alcohol, and he said he only returned to the Miramichi to retrieve stolen money he’d hidden. “I was present, but it wasn’t like I did everything,” he said.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Allan Legere departs from court in Burton, N.B., on Nov. 2, 1991.
CP FILE PHOTO Allan Legere departs from court in Burton, N.B., on Nov. 2, 1991.

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