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Kelly Ellard, who killed B.C. teen Reena Virk in 1997, has parole revoked over drug use
Kelly Ellard, who killed B.C. teen Reena Virk in 1997, has parole revoked over drug use

National Post

time5 days ago

  • National Post

Kelly Ellard, who killed B.C. teen Reena Virk in 1997, has parole revoked over drug use

VANCOUVER — Day parole has been revoked for the woman who drowned Victoria teenager Reena Virk 28 years ago. Article content A Parole Board of Canada decision says Kerry Sim, known as Kelly Ellard when she was convicted, breached her conditions to abstain from drugs. Article content The decision says Sim at first adamantly rejected the test result for methamphetamine, and instead argued it was a false positive from her own medication. Article content Article content The board says that Sim, at 42 years old, still has an anti-social and delinquent value system and is unwilling to accept responsibility for her own actions, putting her at high risk for future delinquent behaviour. Article content Article content She is a single parent of two children and the decision says she has struggled emotionally due to one child's behavioural issues and she also voiced safety concerns after a TV miniseries documented Virk's murder. Article content Fourteen-year-old Virk had already been badly beaten by a group of teenagers under the Craigflower Bridge before Sim, then 15, drowned her in the nearby Gorge waterway. Article content The swarming attack on Virk and subsequent trials and appeals gained international attention, with the judge saying that Virk was the defenceless victim of a prolonged and brutal attack in which Sim played a central role. Article content

How the Student Loan Crisis Will Show Up in the Economy
How the Student Loan Crisis Will Show Up in the Economy

Wall Street Journal

time26-05-2025

  • Business
  • Wall Street Journal

How the Student Loan Crisis Will Show Up in the Economy

Millions of Americans had their student-loan payments put on pause during the pandemic. Now they are back on the hook again. For borrowers, this means that every month, money that they presumably used to spend elsewhere is going to pay off debt instead. Many who aren't paying are now considered delinquent or defaulted, a status that sinks credit scores. Around 5.6 million borrowers were marked newly delinquent on their student loans in the first three months of this year.

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