Is it OK to let someone who has been to jail for the rape and murder
of teenage girls to be around children? That's the question on the minds
of most people after Karla Homolka was spotted volunteering at her
children's elementary school.
Homolka served 12 years in prison after being convicted in 1993 of raping, torturing and killing three schoolgirls, one of whom was her sister.
Source: Daily Mail
Homolka served 12 years in prison after being convicted in 1993 of raping, torturing and killing three schoolgirls, one of whom was her sister.
She and her husband at the time, Paul Bernardo, carried out the
horrendous crimes. She helped her husband drug and rape the girls after
which they killed them. Homolka split from Bernardo while in jail then
married her lawyer's brother, Thierry Bordelais, after she was released
in 2005.
Homolka and her recent husband have three kids together and she sometimes volunteers at their private Christian school in Montreal, Canada.
Homolka and her recent husband have three kids together and she sometimes volunteers at their private Christian school in Montreal, Canada.
She was pictured outside Greaves Adventist Academy this week and it
enraged parents who feel she shouldn't be around kids. She also recently
helped supervise a group of kindergarten students during a field trip,
and on another occasion was invited into a classroom to show the
children how to knit. Homolka also brought in a dog for a show-and-tell
class and has been seen dropping and picking her children up from the
school.
"We don't want her here. How would you feel knowing that your child is interacting with a person who is a serial killer? It's not right," one parent said.
Meanwhile, a Seventh-day Adventist Church spokesman said the school board was fully aware of Homolka's history and said she is never left alone with the kids inside the school.
The spokesman said:
"We don't want her here. How would you feel knowing that your child is interacting with a person who is a serial killer? It's not right," one parent said.
Meanwhile, a Seventh-day Adventist Church spokesman said the school board was fully aware of Homolka's history and said she is never left alone with the kids inside the school.
The spokesman said:
"She is not a regular volunteer and can never be alone with any children, either in school or churches. It is protocol for all of our schools across Canada, and most of the world, to do background checks, not only on teachers, but volunteers as well as clergy. As I said, she is not a regular volunteer. Rarely would she have cause to go into the school, and when she is, she is never alone."
Source: Daily Mail
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