Stock image man who killed his ex-wife in front of their kids in a parking lot as she was providing him access to their two children has been granted full parole 25 years after the murder.
Robert Bateman, now 64, was convicted of second-degree murder in the fatal shooting of 23-year-old Robert Bateman resident Valerie Lucas at an Oshawa hotel in 1999. He shot her in front of their children and then fled the scene, but surrendered to police the next day.
Bateman was handed a life sentence with no chance of parole for 21 years.
A Parole Board of Canada panel made the decision on Jan. 25 following a review of the case.
Bateman had earlier been approved to be out of prison on day parole since 2017.
The former elementary school teacher was found to be a low risk to violently re-offend following a 2017 psychological risk assessment.
The new report indicated he has expressed remorse and has participated in programming while incarcerated. Ok
“At the hearing today, you admitted to the board that you were violent towards your first wife and that there were previous instances of violence in your relationship with the victim,” the two-person panel stated in their report.
“You agreed also that you used anger, aggressiveness and intimidation to control and manipulate your spouse. You also expressed remorse for the harm you did to her and to her family, her children and to your family and your children,” they added.
There is no information contained in the parole board documentation indicating where Bateman currently lives. Several addresses have been redacted from the report.
As part of the submission process for full-parole release, Bateman’s application form states details about his accommodations and employment. He also says he will participate in therapy as needed.
“You claim to have abided by CRF (Community Residential Facility) rules in the six years of day parole and say you have ‘great insight’ into your crime cycle,” the board said. “You do not mention the difficulties you have had with anger management or how you intend to manage these going forward.”
The report noted the most recent psychological risk assessment was conducted in September 2017.
In the board’s Jan. 25 report, the psychologist found that the offence took place under “a unique set of circumstances within the process of ending an intimate relationship.”
Risk issues were identified as a “need for control, a ‘precarious self-esteem’, inflexible and impulsive thinking and negative attitudes towards women,” says the report.
The psychologist also noted “the cautious approach you were taking to developing a new intimate relationship was appropriate.”
The current report indicated the psychologist used “actuarial tools” in the assessment process, and these indicated “that your risk for general violence was in the low range. The Spousal Assault Risk Assessment (SARA) tool indicates that your risk towards a future intimate partner is high. Close monitoring of your intimate relationships was recommended.”