Unceded Coast Salish Territories (Burnaby, British Columbia) – Ed Speidel, an incarcerated person at Matsqui Institution represented by Prisoners’ Legal Services (PLS), was granted parole on September 28, 2023. In deciding to grant Mr. Speidel’s application, the Parole Board considered his serious health issues, including a diagnosis of end-stage lung disease, in determining that his release was warranted. PLS has spent the past 6 months fighting for Mr. Speidel’s release.

PLS will continue to represent Mr. Speidel in a Federal Court case against the Parole Board of Canada regarding the interpretation of s. 121(1) of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act with the goal of ensuring that all incarcerated people in Canada have the right to a parole review at any time if they are terminally ill, suffering excessive hardship, or if their confinement is seriously damaging their health. Currently, people in these circumstances may be subject to wait up to a year before the Parole Board will accept their application for parole, which is antithetical to the compassionate and humanitarian grounds underlying this provision.

Lisa Crossley represented Mr. Speidel at his parole board hearing as well as a previous unsuccessful application for parole by exception, before he was eligible for a regular parole review. “We are so relieved that the Board has finally recognized that Mr. Speidel does not pose a risk to the community. It shouldn’t have taken this long,” said Lisa Crossley.

Media contact:

Lisa Crossley, Staff Lawyer
lcrossley@pls-bc.ca
604-636-0470