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Woman's release enrages Canada

Karla Homolka, 35, was sentenced to 12 years for her role in the rapes and murders of two Ontario teenagers.

By Associated Press
Published July 3, 2005

MONTREAL - The most reviled woman in Canada is set to walk out of prison Monday, facing death threats and rage from a public still bitter that she only served 12 years for the rapes and murders of teenage girls, including her younger sister.

Karla Homolka is so frightened someone might harm her that her attorneys are demanding an unprecedented media blackout on her release and subsequent whereabouts, a move that will be challenged by media attorneys in a Montreal courtroom Monday.

Many in this French-speaking city think Homolka has done her time and should be given her second chance at life, which she got after making a deal with the state in exchange for testifying against her ex-husband.

Dubbed "English-Canada's monster," by Quebecois, the 35-year-old former veterinary assistant who grew up near Niagara Falls has said she intends to settle in Montreal, hoping for anonymity amid those perhaps less familiar with her crimes.

Those offenses, when made public through her testimony at her ex-husband's murder trial in 1995 and from homemade videotapes of their sexual killing rampages, knocked the wind out of the nation.

Canadians, unaccustomed to the grisly crimes they typically attribute to their neighbors to the south, felt as if they had lost a touch of innocence.

Renewed interest in the killer, who now calls herself Karla Teale, has reached beyond Canadian borders. The Internet search engine Google reports Homolka was among their top 10 search subjects last week, just after Michael Jackson and Angelina Jolie.

Homolka was convicted of manslaughter in 1993 and given the relatively light sentence of 12 years for her role in the rapes and murders of Ontario teenagers Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy. In return, she agreed to testify against ex-husband Paul Bernardo, a Toronto bookkeeper serving a life term in an Ontario prison for two counts of first-degree murder.

In sentencing Homolka, prosecutors also considered her role in the 1990 death of her 15-year-old sister, Tammy, who died on Christmas Eve after Homolka held a drug-soaked cloth over her face while Bernardo raped her.

Several psychiatrists who interviewed Homolka, who was often beaten by Bernardo - with a slew of hospital photos to prove it - claimed she was suffering from battered wife syndrome. She was given further leniency for her own mental state.

"She does seem to be very perturbed, yes, but she's done her time and either the system works or it doesn't," said Christian Immer, whose family lives next to the Elizabeth Fry Society halfway house for female inmates in the leafy Montreal suburb of Notre Dame de Grace.

Homolka has received counseling from the home, where she could stay in privacy while she finds a place to live and attempts to elude reporters.

A criminal attorney, Immer blames the media for fueling the hysteria over Homolka's release from a prison just outside Montreal. One photo, of Homolka glaring menacingly into the camera from beneath blonde bangs, has been printed and shown on television so often it's hard for some to picture her otherwise.

But Immer acknowledged the images of Homolka's sister, Tammy, won't soon be forgotten.

"I think people just can't fathom what she did to her sister, the idea of offering her sister to her husband for rape," Immer said. "It was a horrible, horrible, horrible story."

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