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Calgary

Regretful young bank robber shares last hug with family before prison

A Calgary bank robber whose girlfriend worked as a teller at the Bank of Montreal in Mission and provided inside information is facing years in prison after a joint submission by the prosecution and defence.

Joint submission recommends six-year sentence for 'inside job' at Mission BMO

Police closed down the intersection of Fourth Street and 23rd Avenue S.W. temporarily in Mission after a bank robbery on Nov. 26, 2014. (CBC)

A tearful scene unfolded in a Calgary courtroom Friday as the parents, grandmother and little brother of a young bank robber hugged him for the last time before he heads to prison.

"I deeply regret it every single day,"Saleem Nasery told Court of Queen's Bench Justice David Gates.

Prosecutors Vicki Faulkner and Ryan Jenkins and defence lawyer Pat Fagan made a joint submission for a six-year prison sentence afterNasery pleaded guilty last month torobbery with a firearm, forcible confinement and wearing a disguise.

"He's got all the right stuff to make a go of it, to be successful," said Fagan, representing Nasery. "He's got a real good future ahead of him."

Court heard Nasery has been volunteering and received a degree in the time since the robbery.

Naseryapologized to his victims the bank employees who were held hostage.

"That's not who I am," he said. "I'm sorryfor ruining their lives I don't want to be remembered as that person."

Gates asked Nasery'sparentsfor some background on his family.

Nasery's father and mother moved to Canada from Afghanistan in the 1980s. His father's engineering degree was not recognized in Canada so he returned to school. For 21 years, he worked in Calgary's oil and gas sector until he was laid off during the downturn. He's been driving a taxi to support his family ever since.

"It's not an unfamiliar experienceof people coming to this country with unrecognized experience," Gates said sympathetically.

Gates said he will sentence Naserynext Tuesday.

"This is a really difficultdecision."

After adjourning the sentencing to next week, Nasery'smother, father, grandmother and little brother hugged him for the last time before sheriffs took the 24-year-old into custody.

Nasery, 24, and two others, robbed the institution in the southwest community of Mission in November 2014 using information provided byKenza Belakziz, 22, who worked there as a teller.

Initially, police arrested just the three robbers, believingBelakzizwas a victim before they realized it was an inside job. She was arrested a month later.

Police were able to get set up outside the bank while the robbers were still inside and arrested the three men right away. They had stolen about $12,000 in two bags.

All three were arrested within minutes.

Belakzizhad given Naserya list of employees who would be present during the November 2014 robbery, thelayout of the bank, informationabout thesilent alarm,the locations where money was stored and details onbait bills and dye packs.

Kenza Belakziz was working at a Calgary BMO when she provided her boyfriend confidential bank information so he and his friends could rob the bank. Belakziz pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit robbery for being part of the inside job. (Meghan Grant/CBC)

Several of the employees whosewrists were zip tied togetherwrote about always looking over their shoulder afterward. The robbers turned off the lights and ordered the employees to "follow instructions or you will be hurt."

Three of the bank employees who were held hostage wrote victim impact statements describing how the robbery traumatized them.

Marlene Martins said her peace of mind has been stolen and she suffers from nightmares, anxiety and stress.

"I have day-to-day reminders of the terror I felt," said Martins.

Christine Reddy said she "wondered every minute and every second if I would ever see my son again."

Belakziz'ssentencing hearing has been delayed so the lawyers involved can address the judge's concerns thatthe proposed sentence of six months in jail was too low.

A sentence of more than six months would put herat a higher risk of being deported to Morocco, where she no longer has family.

The other robbers, Matthew Alexis Valdes andLucas Wayne Windsor, pleaded guilty in 2015. Valdesreceived a five-and-a-half year sentence for his role while Windsor got a five-year, two-month prison term.