Man guilty in Alberta gas-and-dash death to have conditions when he's released from prison
CTV
A man who pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the gas-and-dash death of an Alberta gas station owner has had conditions imposed by the parole board before his pending release from prison.
A man who pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the gas-and-dash death of an Alberta gas station owner has had conditions imposed by the parole board before his pending release from prison.
Mitchell Robert Sydlowski, 32, was sentenced in September 2020 to three years, 10 months and two days in prison after receiving credit for the time he served in pretrial custody for the death of 54-year-old Ki Yun Jo.
An agreed statement of facts said Jo was killed when Sydlowski sped off in a stolen cube van without paying for $198 of fuel. It happened outside Jo's Fas Gas station in Thorsby, about 70 kilometres southwest of Edmonton, in October 2017.
Documents released Monday by the Parole Board of Canada show Sydlowski's statutory release is pending.
Statutory release is legally required after a federal offender serves two-thirds of their sentence. The rest of the sentence is to be served under supervision in the community.
The documents show that the Parole Board of Canada reviewed Sydlowski's' case on Nov. 1 and imposed conditions that it considers necessary to ensure public safety and support his reintegration into the community.
“You are a young man who committed a very serious violent offence, which took the life of an innocent victim, causing not only that loss of life but also significant, ongoing trauma and loss to his family,” said the decision.