Giant Mine bomber Roger Warren granted day parole - Action News
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Giant Mine bomber Roger Warren granted day parole

A former miner convicted of killing nine workers in a bombing at now-defunct Giant Mine just outside Yellowknife during a bitter dispute between the company and workers has been granted day parole.

'I'm sorry for all the pain I've caused,' Warren tells Parole Board of Canada

Roger Warren, shown being escorted from an RCMP van to the courthouse in Yellowknife in October 1994, was convicted of nine counts of second-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison in the Giant Mine bombing. After his parole hearing Tuesday in B.C., he was granted day parole. (Dave Buston/Canadian Press)

Roger Warren, a former miner convicted of killing nine workers in a bombing at now-defunct Giant Mine just outside Yellowknife in 1992, has been granted parole.

"All I can say is, I'm sorry," Warren said, choking up, during a Parole Board of Canada hearing Tuesday morning in Mission, B.C.

"I'm sorry for all the pain I've caused."

Following the hearing, the parole boardfound Warren "would not be an undue risk to the community."

That's the worst thing that's haunted me, that people would waste their life hating me. I'm not worth it.Roger Warren

Warren is serving a life sentence for nine counts of second-degree murder. At the time of one of the worst mass murders in Canadian history, Warren was a longtime employee of the gold mine and workers wereon strike.

Shortly before 9 a.m. on Sept. 18, 1992, a blast underground shook Giant Mine. Arailcar carrying nine miners had exploded, killing all of them. Three of the men were replacement workers, and six were Giant miners who crossed the picket line.

Family members of victims speak

At the hearing, two widows and a daughter of one of the men who died made presentations.
A parole hearing Tuesday morning for former miner Roger Warren in Mission, B.C., found he would not be an 'undue risk for the community.' (Elizabeth McMillan/CBC)

Pam Sawler was14 and living in Ontario when she heard her father died in the mine. She saidshestruggled with depression and attempted suicide;she said she had stopped caring about what happened to her when the one person whounderstood her died.

"Roger Warren took my sense of security away from me," she said.

Sawler saidshe worries constantly and is too scared to leavefamily and home for fear she'll lose them. She added that she has been with her partner for 18 years, but saidthey've never marriedbecause her father isn't there to walk her up the aisle.

"How do you justify that he canchoose to spend time with his family when we can't?"Sawlertold the parole board.

Imprisoned 18 years

Warren, now 70, has been in prison for 18 years. He has been eligible for day parole for almost four years, but this is the first time he had applied for it.

Warren currently spends five days a week, from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., at a halfway house and has had more than 400 escorted visits to the community with no problems.

Conditions for day parole include no contact with victims, no alcohol and counselling.

His day parole will be evaluated after six months.

There was no discussion of his moving back to Yellowknife.Warren's ex-wife, Helen, still lives in Yellowknife and works for the N.W.T. government.

Warren's conviction has been controversial because many believedhe did not set the blast, or that he did not act alone. After confessing to police in 1993, Warren recanted. During his criminal trial, he maintained it was a false confession, that he had wanted to end the strike and struggled with depression.

He unsuccessfully tried to appeal the conviction in 1997 and for years in prison he maintained he was not guilty. His case even garnered the attention of the Association in Defence of the Wrongly Convicted, the organization that helped proveDavid Milgaard was not guilty.

2nd confession

However, nearly a decade after Warren's initial conviction, he confessed again in 2003.

Warren told the parole board it was cowardice and fear of letting down his familythat caused him to maintain his innocence.

"I didn't think I'd everbeat it really, truthfully," he said about hisconviction.

He said he thought of himself as a despicable person and said his behaviourwas shameful. Warren said it upset him to think the families felt someone had wanted tokill their loved ones, and that's why he confessed a second time.

"I felt better about doing that than I had in a long time," he said.

Warren also acknowledged the statements from family members of the men he killed.

"I'm sure I'dfeel the same way," he said. "That's the worst thing that's haunted me, thatpeople would waste their life hating me. I'm not worth it."

Warren said going to church is thehighlight of his week and he also does volunteer work such asfixing equipment and paintingthe halfway house.

Patty Johnson, Warren's daughter, saidher father is "a very good manwho made a mistake and he has put his time in. The justice systemisn't an eye for an eye.

"I know he wouldn't have intended to hurt anybody. That's why we havestood by him. But you can't change the past,I wish you could."

with files from Elizabeth McMillan