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Photo: . Kimberly Proctor, 18, was tortured and murdered in March 2010. Warning: This story contains disturbing details of a murder.

One of two teens who lured and murdered Langford teen Kimberly Proctor in 2010 has been denied day parole by the Parole Board of Canada on the grounds that he poses a high risk to reoffend. Cameron Moffat was 17 when he and 16-year-old Kruse Wellwood lured 18-year-old Proctor to Wellwood’s home in Langford, where they tied her up, gagged her, sexually assaulted her, beat her, suffocated her and mutilated her body with a knife over several hours. They put her body in a freezer, and the next day travelled to the Galloping Goose trail and set it on fire.



Proctor’s badly burned body was found under a bridge on the trail on March 19, 2010. Moffat and Wellwood, who were sentenced as adults, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder and were given life sentences in 2011 with no possibility of parole for 10 years. They were both eligible for day parole in 2018.

Wellwood was previously denied day parole. In his first appearance before a parole board on Friday, Moffat made a request for day parole and an escorted temporary absence to visit a minimum security institution in Mission, where he hopes to be transferred in the future. The parole board approved the temporary absence, which will take place under the supervision of a correctional officer and member of his case-management team, but denied Moffat day parole, saying he poses a high risk to reoffend a.

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