Basil Borutski will die in prison for 'vicious, cold-blooded' murder of 3 women - Action News
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Ottawa

Basil Borutski will die in prison for 'vicious, cold-blooded' murder of 3 women

Basil Borutski will die in prison after being sentenced Wednesday to 70 years without parole for murdering three of his former partners in a shocking one-day spree of violence in eastern Ontario more than two years ago.

Borutski, 60, murdered former partners Anastasia Kuzyk, Nathalie Warmerdam, Carol Culleton in 2015

Portraits of three women.
Anastasia Kuzyk, Nathalie Warmerdam and Carol Culleton were murdered by Basil Borutski at their homes in and around Wilno, Ont., the morning of Sept. 22, 2015. (CBC News)

Basil Borutski, sentenced to life in prison for murderingthree of his former partners in a shocking one-day spree of violence in Renfrew County in 2015,will die behind bars.

Ina packed Pembroke, Ont., courtroom Wednesday, Borutskilearned he'll have to waitin prison for nearly 70 years before he'll be allowed to apply for parole.

By then, he'dbe about 128 years old.

"From time to time, a crime is so deplorable, so devoid of mercy, so cold-blooded, that denunciation, retributionand giving a sense of justice to the many victims and the community at large becomes the paramount and virtually singular consideration," Ontario Superior Court Justice Robert Marangersaid Wednesday.

"This is one such case."

Just outside,flags flew at half-mast in honour ofthe National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women.

'A violent, vindictive, calculating abuser of women'

On the morning of Sept. 22, 2015, Borutskistrangled 66-year-old Carol Culleton to death with a television cable at her cottage near Combermere, Ont. She had retired from her work as a federal pay analyst just days earlierand had asked Borutskito stop bothering her.

After strangling her,Borutskistole Culleton'scar and drove to 36-year-old real-estate agent and equestrian Anastasia Kuzyk'shouse in Wilno, Ont., where he shot her with a 12-gauge shotgun as her sister ran for her life.

From there Borutski drove to the farmhouse near Eganville, Ont.,he once shared with his final victim, 48-year-old palliative care nurse Nathalie Warmerdam, and shot her as her son fled.

Borutski was convicted by a jury on Nov. 24 of two counts of first-degree murder for shooting Kuzyk and Warmerdam, and one count of second-degree murder for strangling Culleton.

During sentencing submissions Tuesday, Crown attorney Jeffery Richardson called on the judge to denounce Borutski'scrimes inthe strongest possible language, and Marangerappears to have heeded those words.

The "vicious, cold-blooded" murderof three "innocent, beloved women" was "one of the saddest, darkest days" inRenfrewCounty history, Maranger said.

He calledBorutskia "violent, vindictive, calculating abuser of women" who "seems incapable of taking responsibility for his many wrongs," and who "took his hatred to its ultimate climax."

'I considered him family,' victim's daughter says

In an interview outside the courthouse after the sentencing, Valerie Warmerdam, Nathalie's daughter,said grieving, finishing high school, starting college and moving all without her mother's advice and help has "been a lot of stress."

She doesn't live in fear like her brother and his partner, but does have trouble trusting.

"This is a man I lived with for two years. I considered him [Borutski] family. He's the only person who I've ever called stepdad. And every little mannerism that is his, when I see it in somebody else, whether it's a phrase or just the way he stood, I immediately have to remind myself ... that doesn't mean that they're like him," she said.

Valerie Warmerdam speaks after Borutski sentencing

7 years ago
Duration 1:11
Valerie Warmerdam speaks after Borutski sentencing

"It's the whole process of learning to trust and learning, what's a reasonable thing to call a red flag and what isn't?"

As for Maranger'ssentence, Valerie said itfelt like a weight being lifted.

"This is the outcome we expected all along, or hoped for, at least. If anything else had happened we sure as heck would have had words to say, but it's definitely a weight off our shoulders that we don't have to be worrying about court dates, wondering what's going on, afraid of some technicality coming up," she said.

"It's definitely a weight off our shoulders, and he ain't never going to hurt anybody again."

Valerie is glad the case received attention, but she's hoping it leads to substantive change.

"There's certainly been some increased awareness and there's a lot of people pushing for change and using this as their foothold for change," she said."I'm certainly hoping and waiting to hear bills that actually sound like they're going to make a difference being suggested, but I continue to wait. We'll see."

'My friend's life was valued'

Tracey McBain, Nathalie's closest friend, agreed.

"My friend's life was valued, and the sentence put the weight on that value, for all of the victims and their families," McBain said. "There's going to be as Nathalie's mom did say a hole, and that hole never can be filled. But at least this part's over. We can be relieved of that."

Tracey McBain on Borutski sentencing

7 years ago
Duration 0:31
Nathalie Warmerdam's best friend speaks to the media after Basil Borutski was sentenced.

Richardson, the Crown attorney, said the sentence "sends a strong message that deplorable crimes will receive significant sentences.

"I wish I could stand here and say that the victims who have survived these crimes and the people of this county will be able to rise tomorrow to a new day and be able to move on, but ... that is a much easier thing to say than it is to do.... These crimes will have long-lasting and far-reaching consequences for everyone who has been touched by them."

Borutskia threat until he dies: Crown

Richardson had sought consecutive periods ofparole ineligibilitytotalling 70 years just five years short of the maximum possible.

"Even as he becomes an old man, society needs to be separated from Basil Borutski," Richardson told court in his submissions Tuesday. "[He] holds a grudge. Anyone that wrongs him is a potential victim of violence at his hands. This is a threat thatwill never diminish until he himself dies."

Amicuscuriae James Foord, a lawyer appointed by the court to ensure Borutskigets a fair trial, agreed with the Crown aboutconsecutive periods of parole ineligibility Tuesday, butargued it shouldn't be unduly long or harsh, and that40 years was on the "outer limits" of an appropriate length of time.

By then Borutski would have beenabout 97 years old.

The average life expectancy of a man in Canada is about 80.

A man in a blue shirt against a pale-coloured wall.
Basil Borutski stands in a room at the Pembroke OPP detachment after his arrest on Sept. 22, 2015. (OPP/Ontario Superior Court of Justice)