National Post

Italy scares Mafia boss

Canadian wins parole but faces deportatio­n

- Adrian Humphreys

The only semblance of freedom a man who was once named as the top Mafia boss in Toronto enjoyed after winning his parole was the narrow view from a window as he was driven from one prison to another.

Vincenzo ( Jimmy) DeMaria won his fight for day parole last week, but before he could leave Collins Bay prison in Kingston, Ont., he was re-arrested by Canada Border Services Agency officers on Thursday and driven 240 kilometres east to the Central East Correction­al Centre.

There, he was placed in solitary confinemen­t for a 14- day quarantine, as is the pandemic protocol for prisoner transfers.

While concerns over COVID-19 helped Demaria gain his parole, the fact the same deadly contagion has been especially cruel in Italy will form a powerful argument for not sending him to the country he left as an infant, but CBSA is trying.

From prison, Demaria is now in the midst of a detention review by the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board, arguing for release before a much longer hearing on his status in Canada.

These sorts of hearings are always marathons for Demaria, who has a 35- year history of fighting authoritie­s in courts and tribunals, and often winning.

His parole decision last week gave a wry nod to the legal might Demaria brings: “The board received your submission and the numerous submission­s from your lawyer,” the board said, denying him full parole but granting him day parole.

Demaria, 66, said he has chronic kidney problems, regularly sees a specialist and is a cancer survivor.

His age and health place him at greater risk from novel coronaviru­s.

“Your pre- existing health concerns must be taken into considerat­ion,” the parole board said in its decision.

As with his every proceeding, Demaria’s parole hearing vacillated between allegation­s of deep involvemen­t with the Mafia and his formal criminal record, which remains clean since a murder conviction, despite his previous years of freedom.

“You remain a high interest to policing authoritie­s,” the board told him, as if DeMaria wasn’t acutely aware.

The board heard that in October, Demaria’s younger brother, Giuseppe Demaria, known as “Joe,” and two other men he knows, were charged in Italy with Mafia associatio­n. The charges stemmed from a probe in Italy and Canada of related clans of the ’ Ndrangheta, the proper name of the Mafia in Italy’s southern region of Calabria.

The men were on DeMaria’s list of approved visitors while incarcerat­ed and had visited him as recently as May. Despite concerns from police, the board said, the Correction­al Service of Canada allowed the men to keep their visiting privileges.

At his hearing, Demaria continued to deny any involvemen­t in organized crime.

His history with prisons, parole boards and police is long and complicate­d — and cyclical. His tug of war with authoritie­s was the focus of a National Post investigat­ion in 2018.

The yin and yang of DeMaria’s recent time in prison runs from his excellent in- custody behaviour working as a cleaner in the healthcare unit to a confidenti­al report warning he “runs the institutio­n.”

Asked about that at his hearing, Demaria said he just keeps to himself.

Demaria is serving a life sentence for a second-degree murder in 1981 in Toronto, when he shot and killed a grocery clerk who owed him money.

He was released on parole in 1992. Because he has a life sentence, he remains on lifetime parole and, over the years, as police grew convinced he was forging a mighty place for himself in the underworld, he was periodical­ly yanked back behind bars for alleged parole violations.

He disputes each parole revocation and often wins.

In 2013, he was again returned to prison. He fought the allegation­s and won a new hearing but remained behinds bars.

He also fought his deportatio­n.

At IRB hearings in 2018, a police witness called him the “the top guy in Toronto” for the ’ Ndrangheta, one of the world’s most powerful crime groups.

Although Demaria has lived in Canada since before his first birthday, he never became a Canadian citizen.

At his parole hearing last week, he said his parents assumed they would one day return to Italy and did not want to renounce their Italian citizenshi­p. Once he was convicted of murder, he knew any applicatio­n he made would be denied.

The parole board deemed him a low- risk to reoffend. His strong marriage and family support were factors favouring release. He also used his time in prison well, obtaining his high school diploma and taking college

life sentence for 2nd- degree murder in 1981.

courses that would help his businesses. He’s had a familyowne­d bakery and financial services businesses.

In 2018, Demaria was ordered deported but he won his appeal to the Federal Court of Canada. The judge found “strong suspicions” DeMaria was a mobster, but said opinions from police needed to be backed up by hard evidence to justify deportatio­n. CBSA is trying again. An immigratio­n arrest warrant was placed on DeMaria’s prison file, allowing agents to pick him up before he could leave prison.

At his parole hearing, DeMaria said he was expecting this to happen and promised to fight to remain in Canada each and every time. Like he always does.

Both CBSA and Demaria’s lawyers declined to comment.

His detention review is expected to end Friday.

 ?? Peter J. Thompson/ National Post ??
Peter J. Thompson/ National Post
 ?? Adrian Humphreys / National
Post ?? In 2018, Vincenzo “Jimmy” Demaria was ordered deported
but he won his appeal to the Federal Court of Canada.
Adrian Humphreys / National Post In 2018, Vincenzo “Jimmy” Demaria was ordered deported but he won his appeal to the Federal Court of Canada.

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