logo
Man who killed teen while racing on Highway 40 gets full parole

Man who killed teen while racing on Highway 40 gets full parole

Montreal Crime
By
Despite showing signs he is having trouble adapting to life outside a federal penitentiary, a man who killed a 15-year-old girl while he was high and street racing along Highway 40 in the West Island has been granted full parole.
In a decision made last week, the Parole Board of Canada granted Francis Lawrence, 31, full parole on the 54-month sentence he received at the Montreal courthouse on Feb. 1, 2024. He was granted the release despite how his employer reported that Lawrence did poorly and was fired from his workplace while he was out a day parole.
According to a written summary of the decision, his case management team, the people who prepare an offender for a release, pointed out that 'some of your limitations (on the job) were due to the consequences of your head injury (suffered in the crash), which sometimes make it more difficult to perform certain tasks.'
The decision also notes that Lawrence was married inside a federal penitentiary during September 2024 and that the relationship appears to be going well.
According to the Crown's theory of the criminal case, on March 20, 2021, Lawrence's Audi was racing with a black Honda Civic just before it caused the crash that killed 15-year-old Veronica Gashi.
The Sûreté du Québec's investigation revealed Lawrence was travelling between 160 and 200 kilometres per hour. The fatal crash occurred near the St-Charles Boulevard exit in Kirkland. The two passengers in Lawrence's Audi were seriously injured.
Lawrence also suffered injuries that left him in a coma for a long time. Tests done after he arrived at a hospital revealed he was driving with twice the legal blood-alcohol limit.
A few months later, he was charged with several counts related to the crash. On Feb. 13, 2023, he pleaded guilty to dangerous driving causing death and two counts of dangerous driving causing bodily harm.
'The board believes that your discharge plan is realistic and tailored to your needs,' the parole board wrote in the decision made on Aug. 7. 'It will allow you to implement your active job search plan, which will constitute a protective factor both in terms of the self-esteem you will derive from it and the source of income that could result from it, although you are not experiencing significant financial difficulties at this time.
'Thus, taking into consideration your low risk of reoffending and the conformity you demonstrate regarding the supervision framework imposed on you to date, the board believes that the time is right for you to access a less restrictive form of freedom.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two killed in separate collisions in Calgary on Friday
Two killed in separate collisions in Calgary on Friday

Calgary Herald

timea day ago

  • Calgary Herald

Two killed in separate collisions in Calgary on Friday

Calgary police traffic investigators are looking into the circumstances behind a pair of fatal crashes in the city on Friday. Article content The first occurred on Centre Street at 12th Avenue North around 4 p.m., when a 2002 Acura MDX SUV going south turned left, into the path of an oncoming 2004 Suzuki motorcycle. Article content Article content 'It is believed the motorcycle struck the SUV causing the rider to become dismounted and suffer critical injuries,' the Calgary Police Service said in a news release distributed on Saturday. 'The driver of the SUV was uninjured and remained at the scene.' Article content Article content The motorcycle rider, identified by police as a man in his 60s, was taken to a hospital for treatment but he did not survive. Article content Article content 'Neither speed, alcohol, nor drugs are believed to be factors in the collision,' police said. Article content Later on Friday, around 9:45 p.m., a 2004 Honda Civic going north on Macleod Trail, about 500 metres north of Stoney Trail, struck a pedestrian crossing the road going eastward. Article content The driver wasn't hurt but the pedestrian, a man in his 50s, was declared dead at the scene, police said. Article content Speed and impairment are not thought to have played a role in the collision for the driver, but investigators are looking into the possibility alcohol and drugs could have been a factor for the pedestrian. Article content Anyone with information about the crashes or dashboard camera recordings of either incident is asked to contact Calgary police at 403-266-1234. Article content

Elliot Lake woman admits drugs, gambling led her to steal from her employer
Elliot Lake woman admits drugs, gambling led her to steal from her employer

CTV News

time2 days ago

  • CTV News

Elliot Lake woman admits drugs, gambling led her to steal from her employer

A woman from Elliot Lake, Ont., admits that her drug and gambling addictions led her to steal at least $60,000 from her employer, but denies claims from the Crown that her theft was closer to $800,000. (File) A woman from Elliot Lake, Ont., admits that her drug and gambling addictions led her to steal at least $60,000 from her employer, but denies claims from the Crown that her theft was closer to $800,000. Her lawyer wants to call witnesses to back her claims, but the Crown argued that such testimony could stray into areas that affect solicitor-client confidentiality, since her former employer is a lawyer. In a decision released last month, the judge in the case ruled the questions could proceed, provided the defence was careful in the way she crafted her questions. The case itself dates back several years. Stephenie Chevis worked for a law firm in Elliot Lake, with duties that included bookkeeping. She was hired in 2007 and was fired in 2017 when her theft was discovered. Transaction details Her defence lawyer wants to raise details of transactions handled by the firm in an effort to prove that some of the thefts were, in fact, legitimate transactions, while others were the responsibility of someone else. Chevis pleaded guilty in December 2024 to one count of fraud over $5,000. The court heard that she often worked at night, explaining that she said she 'found it easier to do her accounting software work at night when no other employees were using the computer.' By 2016, the lawyer she worked for started getting suspicious. 'Despite working full-time, he found he was unable to draw personal funds from the business, as the firm's general account was dipping into the negative,' the court decision said. So he installed security cameras and told Chevis to stop working at night. 'In April and May 2017, Ms. Chevis was surveilled entering the office after midnight and she was terminated from employment in June 2017,' the decision said. Traced back to her An investigation uncovered a number of irregularities that were traced back to her. When her lawyer contacted her, she quickly confessed. 'Ms. Chevis broke down and told him she had stolen some money the previous year, in the amount of $60,000 to $70,000,' the court said. 'Ms. Chevis was arrested on Sept. 7, 2022. During a video interview with the North Bay OPP, she explained that her conduct was the result of drug and gambling addictions. She admitted to taking $60,000. That remains the extent of Ms. Chevis's admission and the basis for her plea of guilt.' She admitted to issuing checks to her benefit or that of her former spouse. She used some of the money to pay her personal bills, while other cheques were deposited into her accounts at various financial institutions. During a video interview with the North Bay OPP, she explained that her conduct was the result of drug and gambling addictions. She admitted to taking $60,000. — Superior court decision The lawyer she worked for was left in dire straits and was forced to remortgage his home, use his line of credit and cash in more than $300,000 in RRSPs. During a hearing Dec. 10, 2024, Chevis's lawyer was cross-examining a former employee from the law firm when she paused to raise an issue. She wanted to ask questions about three transactions, but was concerned about whether the answers would raise 'potential issues of solicitor-client privilege,' the court decision said. 'It is important to note that Ms. Chevis explicitly waived any solicitor-client privilege she may have had in respect of any of these transactions … The privilege concerns were with respect to (the law firm's) other clients as potential privilege-holders.' The 'Lottery Winner' Specifically, the defence wanted to raise the case of a client of the firm dubbed 'the Lottery Winner,' who won a large amount of money and left it in a trust with the firm. Other cases involved private mortgages given to Chevis using other unnamed clients' funds. 'Ms. Chevis proclaims to have knowledge of these transactions already,' the decision said. 'She is not seeking production. She is simply seeking to elicit the evidence.' The Crown argued that these cases involve solicitor-client privilege, something that can only be breached in specific cases, such as when it's the only way to prove someone's innocence. 'To engage the exception, the Crown submits, an accused must show that she is otherwise unable to raise a reasonable doubt as to her guilt and that there is a risk of wrongful conviction,' the decision said. 'The Crown emphasizes that a finding of guilt has already been made in this case and the proceedings before the court involve sentencing.' Public documents However, Justice Graham Jenner ruled that once something like a mortgage or a will has been executed, it becomes a public document. 'I have difficulty … with the notion that a legal instrument such as a will, a power of attorney, or a private mortgage, could possibly remain covered by solicitor-client privilege once the instrument is acted on, and enters the public sphere,' Jenner said. 'Indeed, when this question was put to the parties, they agreed that it would seem illogical to protect the existence of such public-facing instruments within the scope of the privilege.' As long as the questions were limited in scope to cases no longer covered by privilege, the judge ruled that questions would be allowed to be put to witnesses. I 'instruct counsel to apply that vigilance in the formation of their questions to be put to witnesses,' Jenner wrote in his decision. 'Care must be taken not to pose questions that could tend to elicit evidence that remains covered by the privilege.' Read the full decision here.

Motorist charged year after woman's death, daughter seeks answers
Motorist charged year after woman's death, daughter seeks answers

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Motorist charged year after woman's death, daughter seeks answers

The family of a woman struck and killed on the Harry Lazerenko Bridge last August continue to seek answers, despite police arresting and charging a motorist in connection with her death. 'What happened beforehand, before her getting hit?' said Britney Porter, whose mother, Doris Porter, died in the Aug. 10, 2024, collision. Police were sent to the bridge at about 1:45 a.m. that morning and found the 49-year-old grandmother critically injured. SUPPLIED / FREE PRESS FILES Doris Porter was struck and killed on the Harry Lazerenko Bridge on August 10, 2024. Investigators determined the woman was lying on the road when she was hit by a driver headed west. The motorist stayed at the scene and spoke with officers, police said. On Friday, just over one year after the incident, police announced they had charged a 28-year-old woman with careless driving causing death. She was arrested Monday and released on an appearance notice. Police did not name the woman and were unavailable to provide further information Friday. Porter said she knows little about what the police investigation uncovered. Footage obtained by police and viewed by Porter's sisters showed the moment Doris was struck by the vehicle, Porter said, but she still questions how her mother was lying on the ground in the first place. Some of Doris' belongings, including articles of clothing, were strewn on the roadway on the opposite end of the bridge from where she was found injured, Porter said. Porter said she has asked officials to provide the results of a toxicology report that determined if her mother was impaired by drugs or alcohol at the time of her death. That request has been denied, she said. 'She never had a problem with walking, so I really just think something happened beforehand,' Porter said through tears. 'She needed help, she really needed help and I think her body just gave up on her.' Porter is meeting by phone with a representative from the Crown on Tuesday to go over the case. She hopes some of her questions are answered, she said. She continues to grieve the loss of her mother, whom she described as a 'loving person.' NIC ADAM / FREE PRESS FILES Britney Porter, a daughter of Doris Porter, yells 'Justice for my mom' and 'We want answers' at the Harry Lazarenko Bridge at a protest held after her mother was struck and killed on August 10, 2024. 'She cared and she was always there for everyone,' Porter said. 'She loved her grandkids a lot and that was one of her big things that were keeping her going in life. They made her so happy.' Wednesdays Sent weekly from the heart of Turtle Island, an exploration of Indigenous voices, perspectives and experiences. Doris, who had 13 grandchildren, was living with Porter when she died, she said. Protesters gathered on the bridge last August and held a vigil for Doris. They called for a full investigation into her death. Family members held a prayer and offered tobacco to the water before painting a red dress symbol with the words 'Justice for Doris' across both lanes of the bridge. 'It really meant a lot to us. Me personally, I didn't know how much support we actually had out there until that day when I saw everyone come together for my mom,' Porter said Friday. Tyler SearleReporter Tyler Searle is a multimedia producer who writes for the Free Press's city desk. A graduate of Red River College Polytechnic's creative communications program, he wrote for the Stonewall Teulon Tribune, Selkirk Record and Express Weekly News before joining the paper in 2022. Read more about Tyler. Every piece of reporting Tyler produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store