Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Parole conditions changed for former N.S. fugitive found in Latin America

The online edition of Global News Morning with Paul Brothers and Alyse Hand on Global Halifax – May 11, 2022

A man who was a fugitive in Latin America for five years after fatally shooting another man in Nova Scotia can now move from his halfway house.

Story continues below advertisement

In a decision released Thursday, the Parole Board of Canada says Steven Douglas Skinner is allowed to visit his girlfriend but must continue to live in a halfway house after successfully completing his six-month day parole that was granted Oct. 29 of last year.

The parole board notes that Skinner is still subject to the same conditions that applied in the halfway house, including that he avoid known criminals, avoid contact with the family of his victim and abstain from drugs and alcohol.

The daily email you need for Halifax's top news stories.

Skinner was released on day parole after serving two years of a six-year sentence for manslaughter.

He had been sentenced to an 11-year prison term for manslaughter in September 2019 following the April 2011 death of Stacey Adams in Lake Echo, N.S.

He was initially charged with second-degree murder but pleaded guilty to the manslaughter charge after a deal was struck between Crown prosecutors and his defence lawyer just before his trial.

Story continues below advertisement

During sentencing, Skinner was given five years credit for the time he spent in custody awaiting trial, leaving six years to serve on his prison sentence.

Shortly after Adams’ death in 2011, an international warrant was issued for Skinner’s arrest after he initially fled to Mexico.

He was arrested by Venezuelan authorities on Margarita Island in 2016, and was extradited to Canada in 2017.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 11, 2022.

Editor’s note: The Canadian Press erroneously reported in a May 11 story that former fugitive Steven Douglas Skinner is allowed to move in with his girlfriend under revised parole conditions. In fact, Skinner can visit his girlfriend but must continue to live in a halfway house.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article