Crime victims need help through gruelling, traumatic parole process: advocates
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Last Friday, a Parole Board of Canada decision gave Greg Parsons a momentary reprieve from weeks of night terrors and unearthed trauma.
The parole hearing for the man who killed Parsons’ mother, Catherine Carroll, had just ended, and Parsons was pacing around his house, elated and electrified. He’d read out a gut-wrenching, 30-page victim impact statement that he’d worked on for weeks, and it seemed to have been successful: Brian Doyle, the man convicted of stabbing his mother 53 times on Jan. 2, 1991, had his day parole revoked.
But the decision will be revisited in 90 days. That means Parsons could wind up delivering yet another emotional statement at yet another hearing.
“It takes a terrible toll,” he said in an interview Tuesday. “I have PTSD, I can’t function, I’m not going to be able to go into work.”