Vancouver Sun

Reena Virk’s killer Ellard receives conditiona­l day parole for six months

- With files from Kim Bolan and Tiffany Crawford The Canadian Press

Kelly Ellard, who killed 14-yearold Reena Virk near a Victoriaar­ea bridge two decades ago, has been given conditiona­l approval for day parole.

Ellard, 35, was granted day parole for six months, but must first complete a residentia­l treatment program for substance abuse.

After six months, the parole board will review the decision. Ellard will be subject to conditions including that she cannot use drugs or alcohol or be in contact with anyone involved in criminal activity or Virk’s family.

Ellard wiped away tears Thursday as she learned the news. She was 15 when Virk was killed and is serving a life sentence for seconddegr­ee murder.

Panel member Colleen Zuk said it goes without saying that Ellard committed a “heinous” crime and that she was largely responsibl­e for Virk’s death.

“It’s very problemati­c in your case that there have been years and years of deception, of lying about the facts,” Zuk said. “Today, we found that you continued to somewhat minimize.”

However, she said she found Ellard to be more transparen­t than she’d been in the past, including that she admitted to planning to confront and harm Virk and that she wanted to “get rid of her” after the situation escalated to a swarming and a beating.

Zuk also acknowledg­ed that Ellard had done trauma counsellin­g and had the support of her casemanage­ment team, who described her as making significan­t progress.

Ellard told the panel before the decision was made that there was nothing Virk could have possibly said or done to deserve such treatment.

“It wasn’t about her,” she said. “She should have been at home with her family who loved her, not with us that night, and I’m very sorry.”

The two-member panel has ruled that the six-month day parole period will begin as soon as Ellard enters the treatment program.

Her parole officer said the last substance abuse issue she had in prison was in June 2015 and she has not been violent in more than a decade.

It’s unclear whether Ellard’s infant son, who lives with her in prison, would be able to join her at the residentia­l substance abuse treatment centre. She became pregnant last year after having conjugal visits with her boyfriend, who is in prison and is scheduled to return to the community soon.

She said she intends to co-parent with him, but that if he commits a crime or starts using drugs, she is prepared to leave him.

“As much as I love him, if I had to let go ... for the sake of myself and my child, I would.”

Ellard first applied for day parole in 2016 and was denied, but in February she was granted temporary escorted absences to go to parenting programs and doctor’s appointmen­ts with her baby.

She has served about 15 years in prison, having spent some periods out on bail.

She was convicted of seconddegr­ee murder in 2005 after three trials.

A court heard that Ellard and several other teens swarmed and beat Virk, before Ellard and a teenage boy followed her across a bridge, smashed her head into a tree and held her underwater until she drowned.

Warren Glowatski was also convicted of second-degree murder and granted full parole in 2010.

Ellard has recently assumed more responsibi­lity for her part in the murder, saying she rolled Virk’s unconsciou­s body into the Gorge waterway.

Ellard continued to deny holding the girl’s head underwater on Thursday.

“I am adamant that didn’t happen,” she told the panel. “Someone who had been beaten that badly, you wouldn’t need to hold them under water.”

Zuk and another panel member, Linda Cross, pressed her to explain why she pushed Virk’s body into the water.

Ellard said she was terrified that Virk would tell police about the beating.

“I had never seen anything like that,” Ellard said. “Either, she was dead or she was dying. I just wanted to get rid of her.”

Ellard broke down in tears often during the hearing. Cross commented that she appeared to be struggling to speak about drowning Virk.

“It’s a hard thing to hear coming out of my own mouth,” Ellard said.

When asked who was responsibl­e for Virk’s death, she replied, “I am.”

Cross asked her to explain how she was responsibl­e.

“She drowned, and I put her in the water.”

The father of Ellard’s baby, Darwin Dorozan, was granted day parole for six months and statutory release from prison earlier this month on Nov. 9.

He had received parole in August 2016, but it was revoked nine days later, when he became a “person of interest” in the May 2016 disappeara­nce of a low-level drug dealer.

He denied being involved, and it was determined that he had helped a friend, closely associated with the person who disappeare­d, rent a vehicle. Despite this, the parole board says Dorozan has completed all necessary rehab programs while in prison, and he is considered a low risk to reoffend.

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Kelly Ellard

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