National Post

IT TURNS OUT CANADA SENDS HEINOUS KILLERS TO PLEASANT CAMPUS

TORIES, BLOC TO PROBE JAIL CONDITIONS THAT INCLUDE HOCKEY RINK, TENNIS COURTS

- TRISTIN HOPPER

Acoalition of MPS from the Conservati­ves and the Bloc Québécois will hold an “emergency meeting" to probe why two of Canada’s most notorious killers now live at an open-campus prison equipped with a hockey rink, a wood shop and a billiards table.

In just the past year, cannibal murderer Luka Magnotta and serial killer Paul Bernardo were both transferre­d to La Macaza Institutio­n, a medium-security prison in rural Quebec.

This prompted Conservati­ve MP Frank Caputo to pay an official visit to La Macaza, where he reported encounteri­ng a “university campus” complete with an outdoor rink that transforms into a tennis court in the summer.

“Canada’s most horrific murderers are living better than most Canadians,” said Caputo in a widely circulated video.

And the treatment given to Bernardo and Magnotta isn’t entirely beyond the pale. While there remain bleak and even decrepit corners of the Canadian prison system, it is possible if not common for heinous offenders to spend their days at low-security campuses replete with recreation­al amenities.

According to Statistics Canada, the majority of inmates classified as “dangerous offenders” live in medium-security institutio­ns like La Macaza.

While not all dangerous offenders are murderers, the designatio­n is only assigned in cases where a judge finds that the criminal “constitute­s a threat to the life, safety or physical or mental well-being of other persons.”

In the 2022-23 fiscal year, the prison system had 580 dangerous offenders living in medium-security lodgings, and just 99 in maximum security.

And in 2018, an investigat­ion by CTV News found that one in four incarcerat­ed murderers lived in minimum-security facilities.

It’s so rare for Canada to put offenders in maximum security, in fact, that Correction­al Service Canada’s official website writes that the institutio­n’s primary aim is to “prepare inmates for a medium-security environmen­t.”

While Bernardo’s transfer to La Macaza last summer was called “incomprehe­nsible” by then Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino, criminolog­ists at the time told reporters that it was actually to be expected.

University of Montréal criminolog­y professor Jean Proulx told The Canadian Press in June that La Macaza was a common destinatio­n for violent sexual offenders who were approachin­g their parole eligibilit­y, as it had programs to “reduce the interest for rape or sadistic behaviour.”

Since 2018, La Macaza has also been the home of Michael Rafferty, the murderer of eight-year-old Woodstock, Ont., girl Tori Stafford. In 2009, Rafferty and his girlfriend Terri-lynne Mcclintic lured Stafford into a car with a promise of seeing a puppy, and proceeded to torture, rape and murder the child with a hammer.

Mcclintic, notably, would spark a similar wave of national outrage over prisoner treatment when in 2018 she was transferre­d to a minimum-security Indigenous healing lodge — despite not being Indigenous herself.

La Macaza is just one of a network of “open campus” medium-security facilities across Canada. While the perimeter is still surrounded by high walls and barbed wire, inmates are given more freedom of movement, expanded privileges about owning private property (including video game systems) and access to common areas, such as kitchenett­es in which to prepare meals.

“Every night I would cook, play video games, work out at the gym, and play cards with other guys, and all the while my CD player never left my side,” reads a 2016 account by former inmate Karim Martin of living at Ontario’s Fenbrook Institutio­n. “The prison reminded me of a college campus, except all of the residents were male and had criminal records.”

During the summer, Martin added that “inmates would get together and cook on the grills outside while watching another group of inmates play sports, mainly soccer or softball.”

For the one quarter of incarcerat­ed murders who end up in minimum security, meanwhile, accommodat­ions can become as comfortabl­e as a cottage or a shared duplex.

William Head Institutio­n, located just outside Victoria, boasts a picturesqu­e waterfront location, tennis courts, a theatre program and security so light that escaping is a simple matter of walking around a perimeter fence at low tide. That’s what two inmates did in 2019 before immediatel­y proceeding to murder a random homeowner who lived nearby.

In 2016, Conservati­ve MP Erin O’toole — who was then serving as the party’s public safety critic — decried William Head’s “summer camp-like conditions.”

At the time, the facility was hosting 86 murderers; 29 convicted of first-degree murder and 57 for second-degree.

Prison officials also defended William Head’s amenities at the time as “not being out of the ordinary” for similar prisons.

HORRIFIC MURDERERS ARE LIVING BETTER THAN MOST CANADIANS.

 ?? CORRECTION­AL SERVICE OF CANADA / FACEBOOK ?? In just the past year, cannibal murderer Luka Magnotta and serial killer Paul Bernardo were both transferre­d to La Macaza Institutio­n, a Quebec medium-security prison.
CORRECTION­AL SERVICE OF CANADA / FACEBOOK In just the past year, cannibal murderer Luka Magnotta and serial killer Paul Bernardo were both transferre­d to La Macaza Institutio­n, a Quebec medium-security prison.

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