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Nova Scotia’s justice minister concerned over convicted killer and sexual predator’s release back to U.S.

A law enforcement officer leads William Shrubsall through the Niagara County Court House in Lockport, N.Y., on Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2019. The Canadian Press/AP, The Union-Sun & Journal, Tim Fenster

Nova Scotia’s justice minister is expressing concern over a Parole Board of Canada decision to release a notorious convicted killer and sexual predator back to the United States.

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Mark Furey says he will write a letter to his federal counterpart, David Lametti, about the release of William Shrubsall, who was declared a dangerous offender in 2001 following violent sexual assaults against women in Halifax.

The chief Crown attorney for Halifax, Paul Carver, has questioned the logic of the parole board’s decision, while a former lead police investigator in the case, Tom Martin, called it “borderline negligence.”

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The minister says Shrubsall’s crimes were horrendous and he knows from his past experience as an RCMP officer that “victims are retraumatized by these very circumstances.”

The 47-year-old Shrubsall was returned this week to authorities in Upstate New York, where he will serve a sentence for sexual abuse, but could be eligible for parole in two years and four months for that offence.

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Furey says although he’s routinely written to federal cabinet ministers on behalf of the province before, it’s the first time he’s written about a parole board decision.

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