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Manitoba premier says Jeremy Skibicki should stay behind bars for life

Speaking at a press conference on Thursday, Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew provided an update on the plotted search for two slain Indigenous women in the Prairie Green landfill north of Winnipeg. The comments come one day after serial killer Jeremy Skibicki was handed four life sentences with no chance of parole. “This person can never be free again,” Kinew said.

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew says convicted serial killer Jeremy Skibicki should never see the light of day again as a free person.

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Skibicki has been sentenced to life in prison, with no chance of parole for 25 years, for killing four Indigenous women in Winnipeg.

The four concurrent life sentences, and 25 years without parole eligibility, are the maximum penalty under law.

Kinew says Skibicki should never be free again, and any parole hearings in the future should take into account the impact the killings have had on family members and others.

The federal government used to have a law that allowed for consecutive sentences with longer parole ineligibility, but the Supreme Court of Canada struck it down two years ago.

The trial heard Skibicki targeted his victims at homeless shelters, then strangled or drowned them before disposing of their remains in garbage bins.

His lawyers said he should be found not criminally responsible due to mental illness but the judge rejected that argument.

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