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Lisa Dudley’s family ‘devastated’ after man who orchestrated murder granted day parole

1571270646 Lisa Dudley’s family ‘devastated’ after man who orchestrated murder granted | News

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The family of a Mission woman murdered in 2008 is furious after learning the man who orchestrated the attack has been granted day parole.

Lisa Dudley and her boyfriend Guthrie McKay were shot in their home in 2008. Guthrie died immediately in the targeted shooting, but Dudley died in hospital after lying paralyzed inside the house for four days.

In September 2016, Thomas Holden plead guilty to conspiracy to commit murder. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison the following year.









Murder victim’s family keeps up campaign to have her possessions returned


Murder victim’s family keeps up campaign to have her possessions returned

Now, less than three years later, Dudley’s stepfather Mark Surakka says Holden has been granted day parole, which he calls a “slap in the face” of the family.

“We’re exasperated by it, and devastated,” he told Global News. “Our family is taken aback by it.

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“Tom Holden may not have had his finger on the trigger, but he orchestrated it and ordered it and now he’s out, he’s literally out.”


READ MORE:
Court orders personal belongings of B.C. woman murdered 11 years ago be returned to family

Holden was the fourth person to be charged in the attack.

In 2011, Bruce Main, Jack Woodruff and Justin Mackinnon were each charged with two counts of first-degree murder.

Main was sentenced to eight years in jail in 2013. His trial heard that Dudley and McKay were running a marijuana grow-op in their home. Main helped out Dudley at the grow-op and was the one who led the killers to the home.


READ MORE:
Lisa Dudley inquest wraps, jury urges RCMP to probe complaints about potential harm more closely

Woodruff plead guilty to both of his counts and is currently serving a life sentence. Mackinnon was sentenced to seven years in jail.

In 2018, a coroners inquest heard that RCMP officers attended the crime scene in 2008 but didn’t leave their vehicles or speak with any nearby residents.

Dudley’s family has long accused the RCMP of contributing to her death. A negligence lawsuit against the force was tossed out in 2018.


READ MORE:
Man guilty in 2008 targeted murder of Lisa Dudley and Guthrie McKay sentenced to 10 years

The family just recently gained access to Dudley’s belongings after a years-long battle with RCMP, who had held onto the items for evidence.

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Now that Holden has been granted parole, Surakka said it’s just the latest insult the family has faced.

“I think it sends a disastrous message out, that you can kill, you can murder and you won’t get those long terms in prison,” he said.

Global News has requested comment and documents from the Parole Board of Canada.

—With files from Paula Baker

© 2019 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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