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Inmate, 58, dies in B.C. prison 40 years after receiving indeterminate sentence

BY The Canadian Press, translated by Connect News, Nov 4, 2022 5:16 AM - REPORT AN ERROR

A former Fort Nelson, B.C., resident has died in prison, 40 years after he was handed an indeterminate sentence for two second-degree murders. (Photo - Correctional Service of Canada)

A former Fort Nelson, B.C., resident has died in prison, 40 years after he was handed an indeterminate sentence for two second-degree murders.

Darcy Sidoruk was 18 years old in 1982 when he pleaded guilty and was sentenced for the shooting two years earlier of family friend Yvonne Doucette in Dawson Creek.

Sidoruk also admitted to shooting 19-year-old James Pitt, who picked him up hitchhiking outside Dawson Creek, shortly after the murder of Doucette.

His 1982 sentencing hearing was told of his long anti-social and criminal past, including assault charges against a teacher and a young child, thefts, break-ins and, at the age of 14, being the only child expelled from every public school in Fort Nelson.

A psychiatrist told the hearing that Sidoruk suffered severe burns in an accident at age three and spent a large part of his childhood recovering alone in hospital, before being abandoned by his parents and placed in a relative's care, where he suffered more abuse.

Sidoruk, who was 58 years old, was serving his sentence at the Pacific Institution in Abbotsford and a statement from the facility says police and the coroner have been notified and the Correctional Service of Canada will also review the death.

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