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https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/crime-driving-impaired-courts-parole-1.5392304
A Pembroke, Ont., dentist convicted in 2015 of drunk driving in a horrific collision that killed a father of three has been granted full parole after serving 13 months of a five-year prison sentence.
Christy Natsis, 55, was convicted of impaired driving causing death and dangerous driving causing death after Bryan Casey, 50, died in a head-on collision on Highway 17 near Arnprior, Ont., on March 31, 2011. Natsis lost an appeal in May 2018.
Natsis has now been released from the Ottawa halfway house where she's been living on day parole since June, and where staff described her behaviour as "exemplary."
In its three-page decision dated Dec. 4, the parole board said correctional staff rated her "accountability, motivation level, and re-integration potential all as high."
According to the report, Natsis has acknowledged she's an alcoholic, sought counselling and attended Alcoholics Anonymous meetings while in custody.
"It is the Board's opinion that you will not present an undue risk to society if released," the decision concludes.
A Pembroke, Ont., dentist convicted in 2015 of drunk driving in a horrific collision that killed a father of three has been granted full parole after serving 13 months of a five-year prison sentence.
Christy Natsis, 55, was convicted of impaired driving causing death and dangerous driving causing death after Bryan Casey, 50, died in a head-on collision on Highway 17 near Arnprior, Ont., on March 31, 2011. Natsis lost an appeal in May 2018.
Natsis has now been released from the Ottawa halfway house where she's been living on day parole since June, and where staff described her behaviour as "exemplary."
In its three-page decision dated Dec. 4, the parole board said correctional staff rated her "accountability, motivation level, and re-integration potential all as high."
According to the report, Natsis has acknowledged she's an alcoholic, sought counselling and attended Alcoholics Anonymous meetings while in custody.
"It is the Board's opinion that you will not present an undue risk to society if released," the decision concludes.