Toronto Star

Homolka volunteeri­ng at school

Not allowed to be alone with students, spokespers­on says

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL— The day-to-day activities of Karla Homolka are once again causing a stir in Montreal after a media report said the convicted killer has been allowed to volunteer at an elementary school.

Local media captured images and photos of Homolka using a purse to hide her face Wednesday morning as she dropped off her children outside a private Christian elementary school in Montreal’s Notre-Damede-Grâce neighbourh­ood.

On Tuesday, CityNews reported that Homolka had occasional­ly volunteere­d at the school, including supervisin­g a field trip and bringing her dog into the classroom to interact with children.

A spokespers­on for the Seventhday Adventist Church, which runs the school, told the station that Homolka was not a regular volunteer and was not allowed to be alone with the children, which would have required a criminal-background check.

The school did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment from The Canadian Press.

In the early 1990s, Homolka and her then-husband, Paul Bernardo, were convicted of crimes related to the rape and murder of two schoolgirl­s, Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy. Bernardo was declared a dangerous offender and sentenced to life in prison while Homolka struck a deal with prosecutor­s in 1993 to serve 12 years in prison for manslaught­er.

She had earlier told investigat­ors that Bernardo abused her and made her a reluctant accomplice to the killings, although it was later discovered through videotape evidence she had a far more active role than she led on. A lawyer who represents the French and Mahaffy families says it’s still a “kick in the gut” for them to hear reports of Homolka seemingly living a normal life with her husband and children.

“These are joys the French and Mahaffy families will never enjoy because of Karla Homolka’s participat­ion with Paul Bernardo to murder their children,” Tim Danson said in a phone interview.

Danson said he’s convinced Homolka was never rehabilita­ted and shouldn’t be allowed to work with children.

“I think she’s dangerous and I certainly wouldn’t take the chance with my kids to be around her,” he added.

Homolka was released in 2005 after serving her full sentence and has since changed her name a number of times.

The fact that Homolka had moved back to Quebec with her husband, Thierry Bordelais, was confirmed in October 2014 by her younger sister Logan Valentini during testimony at Luka Rocco Magnotta’s high-profile murder trial.

News of her whereabout­s have generated headlines several times, most recently in 2016 when some residents of Chateaugua­y, south of Montreal, expressed concern over a report that she was living in the town.

The latest report came up in Ottawa on Wednesday, where politician­s were questioned on Homolka’s reported activities.

Montreal MP Marc Miller said he was concerned by the report but wouldn’t jump to conclusion­s, saying only it was something the government “would be looking into.” NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair raised the question of whether it might be time to forgive and move on. “Everybody is going to have to take their own stock of that and ensure that first and foremost that the security of their kids is taken care of,” Mulcair said on Wednesday.

“Beyond that, it becomes a question of forgivenes­s,” he added, pointing out that Homolka had “paid her debt” to society.

 ?? DOMENIC FAZIOLI/BT MONTREAL ?? Convicted killer Karla Homolka outside the Greaves Adventist Academy in a Montreal suburb last week.
DOMENIC FAZIOLI/BT MONTREAL Convicted killer Karla Homolka outside the Greaves Adventist Academy in a Montreal suburb last week.

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