Gregory Bromby was convicted of killing Tara Manning in the bedroom of her Dorval, Que., home. (CBC)

Parole denied for Haitian-born murderer at aboriginal hearing
Gregory Bromby, convicted of killing Tara Manning, was seeking day parole
CBC News
Posted: Jan 18, 2012 5:30 PM ET Last Updated: Jan 18, 2012 8:15 PM ET
Gregory Bromby was convicted of killing Tara Manning in the bedroom of her Dorval, Que., home. (CBC)
Tara Manning, 15, was found stabbed to death in her Montreal-area home in 1994. (CBC)

The murderer of a 15-year-old Montreal girl has been denied parole at an aboriginal hearing.

Gregory Bromby was convicted of killing Tara Manning in the bedroom of her Dorval, Que., home in 1994.

Manning was smothered, raped and stabbed 51 times.Her father was asleep in the next room and found her in the morning when he went to wake her for school.

Bromby was linked to the crime after his DNA matched evidence found at the scene. He said he was high on drugs at the time. He also admitted to raping three other young women.

Bromby is serving a life sentence but was eligible for early parole because he was charged as a minor.
Parole attempts

The Parole Board of Canada denied his request for unaccompanied absences in 2007.

In November 2010 he was moved to a Winnipeg prison.

Bromby, who was born in Haiti, requested a hearing usually reserved for aboriginal offenders.

The Parole Board of Canada said the elder-assisted hearing is open to all inmates but applicants must prove to the parole committee that they are committed to aboriginal spirituality.

Tara’s father, Michael Manning, was disappointed that Bromby was granted the special hearing.

“He was called a psychopath during the murder trial in 1998. I don’t expect him ever to be better. I don’t expect him to ever have a life where he can be a good part of society,” said Manning, who flew to Winnipeg to give his victim’s impact statement.

“I wish it’s something that I could just let go, but I think of the people he is going to harm, like Tara, if he gets out,” said Manning.
Aboriginal hearing

An aboriginal elder led Bromby’s parole hearing at the Stony Mountain Institution in Winnipeg Wednesday.

Manning said he preferred the three-hour hearing to Bromby’s 2007-parole hearing. He said Bromby was facing him, rather than turned away, and he had to answer more questions about the murder.

Manning said Bromby told the parole board he killed Tara so she wouldn’t tell anyone that he had raped her and then stabbed her 51 times to make sure she was dead.
(…)

Random Posts

Loading…

Article posted in Attempted murder/Murder, Communities, Crime, Crime (type), Crime involving children/teenagers, Criminal refugees/illegal immigrants, Death by strangulation/asphyxiation/throat slash, Immigration, Multiculturalism, Non-African black community, Non-European crime, Rape/Gang rape, Stabbing/Fatal stabbing
  • Euonymus

    Why is this sub-human still in Canada?!