Woman convicted in murder of Loretta Saunders granted 30-day pass from prison - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Woman convicted in murder of Loretta Saunders granted 30-day pass from prison

A Halifax woman convicted of a brutal murder has been granted a 30-day, unescorted absence from prison to help her prepare for the potential end of her time in custody.

Victoria Henneberry pleaded guilty in 2015 along with her then boyfriend

A white woman with dyed red hair is seen wearing an off-white jacket. A man wearing a police jacket stands in front of her.
Victoria Henneberry seen being escorted into Halifax provincial court on Feb. 28, 2014. Henneberry has been granted a month-long, unescorted absence from prison. (Mike Dembeck/The Canadian Press)

A Halifax woman convicted in the murder of Loretta Saundershas been granted a 30-day, unescorted absence from prison to help her prepare for the potentialend of her time in custody.

Victoria Lea Henneberry, 39, pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in April 2015 and was given an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 10 years.

With that datefast approaching, the Parole Board of Canada has granted Henneberry a 30-day pass so she can live in a halfway house, attend programs and do volunteer work.

While itgranted her the absence, the boardvoiced concerns about Henneberry.

"The board gives significant aggravating weight to the precalculated and violent nature of [the offence]and to the callous disregard for the victim and the victim's family after the victim was brutally murdered," the panel wrote in its decision.

Convicted along with boyfriend

Henneberry was convicted along with her then boyfriend, Blake Leggette, just as their trial was about to get underway. Leggettepleaded guilty to first-degree murder, which carriedan automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.

Saunders,an Inuk woman from Labrador, was killed Feb. 13, 2014, after going to the apartment she was subletting to Henneberry and Leggette and trying to collect rent.

According to an agreed statement of facts, Leggetteattacked Saunders and killed her. Henneberry and Leggettethen fled in Saunders's car, stopping in New Brunswick to dump her body along the side of a highway. The couplecontinued onto Ontario, where police caught up to them.

A young Inuk woman is wearing a red dress.
At the time of her death, Loretta Saunders was studying at Saint Mary's University in Halifax and writing a thesis on missing and murdered Indigenous women. (Facebook)

In a hearing on Sept. 25, the parole board ruled that Henneberry is to stay in a community-based residential facility andattend one-on-one courses during her 30-day absence.

The list of topics available through the residential facilityinclude grief and loss, stress management, employment readiness, trauma support and relationships. In her downtime, Henneberry plans to volunteer at a food bank and attend a fitness centre.

In its decision to grant the absence, the boardnotedHenneberry has successfully completed much shorter absences from prison to attend programs. She was approved for more external programs, but she was unable to participate because of restrictions imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Controversy over previous absence

In February2020, Henneberry was granted a five-hour pass to attend a session with theHealing of Seven Generations, an Ontario-basedprogram available to Indigenous offenders. Henneberry has identified as American Cherokee on her mother's side, although the parole boardsaid in a decision she wasnot raised in the culture and hadno knowledge of her history.

Henneberry was banned from accessing the program after the Saunders family protested her participation.

As recently as August of this year, the Saunders family submitted a victim impact statement to the board, talking about the trauma Loretta's death still causes for them.

In its decision, the board cautioned that Henneberry still has a lot of work to do to prepare for possible parole.

"The board remains seriously concerned about your low level of insight and limited responsibility for the [offence]," it wrote.

"Although you have completed required and voluntary interventions to mitigate your risk, you remain assessed at a low-moderate risk level, and it is essential that you complete further treatment and programming to mitigate your risk of reoffending."