patching...
Update: Want to get your Hatboro and Horsham news in your inbox every morning? Sign up for our free newsletter! »
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

MontCo DA, Legislators: Parole Board Violated Victims' Rights in Robb Case

Officials say Ellen Robb's family deserves to be heard by the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole; a meeting has been scheduled.

 

 

The family of Ellen Robb, the wife and mother who was brutally murdered by her husband, Rafael Robb, just before Christmas in 2006, has been granted an opportunity to speak to the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole regarding its recent decision to release Robb from prison after officials uncovered a law requiring the board to give victims a voice in the parole process.

Montgomery Count District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman, State Representatives Mike Vereb (R-150) and Todd Stephens (R-151), and Ellen Robb’s brother, Gary Gregory, announced that Ellen’s family would be meeting with the chairman of the parole board next week.

“The opportunity to meet with the chairman of the parole board is a terrific development and a step forward in their reconsidering and correcting a wrong that they can right,” Gregory said.

Rafael Robb admitted to bludgeoning his wife just before Christmas in 2006, and was sentenced to five to 10 years in prison for voluntary manslaughter after entering into a plea bargain during the 2007 court case.

The sentence caused great upset among Ellen Robb’s family and victims’ rights advocates, who were shocked when the parole board announced his release after just over the minimum time served.

Vereb, who had previously spoken out against the parole board’s decision, said that when he sat down to look at legislation to protect victims in the parole process, he found that it was already there – but that the parole board was not adhering to it.

Vereb said in a letter to the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole that, according to Title 18 PS sections 11.501 and 11.502 of Pennsylvania state law, victims or their immediate families must be notified no later than 90 days prior to the parole date of an offender, and they are permitted to appear in person before the board.

While Ellen Robb’s family was notified, Vereb said, it was not within the 90-day window.

Stephens said that Gregory contacted his legislative office a year ago when he was attempting to appear infront of the board to oppose Rafael Robb's parole, and the request was denied.

According to Ferman, that this is an issue of victims’ rights that will hopefully change after today.

“The parole board isn’t just there to open the doors of the prison and let people out,” Ferman said.  “They are also there to consider the rights of victims and to protect the rights of victims. For them to unleash a dangerous, violent criminal into our community without ever talking to the victims is unconscionable, and that should change after today.”

[Editor's note: Reporter Brittany Tressler is the daughter of Judge Paul W. Tressler, who presided over the trial of Rafael Robb.]

Related Topics: Mike Vereb, Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, Rafael Robb, Todd Stephens, and risa vetri ferman

growyourown

9:25 am on Saturday, January 19, 2013

5-10 years for killing his wife!! hasn't the DA's office and the judge done the family wrong in this case?

Reply
Comment_arrow

60 gunner

5:06 pm on Friday, January 25, 2013

They should harvest his organs for thise who need them

Barb

9:29 am on Saturday, January 19, 2013

That is what the problem is, judges soft on crime . Tougher laws to keep criminals off the streets.

Reply

Alex

11:30 am on Saturday, January 19, 2013

Sounds like the people on the parole board need to be replaced.

Reply

Laura

12:56 pm on Saturday, January 19, 2013

Who was the prosecuting attorney who agreed to 5-10 years? Are you kidding me??

Reply
Comment_arrow

Steven Kurcik

4:09 pm on Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The prosecutor was Bruce Castor Jr. None of the articles I have read mention his name. Now the D. A. and other slimmy politicians are jumping onboard. Where were they 5 years ago when this sentence was agreed to?

gerhard sweetman

1:23 pm on Saturday, January 19, 2013

Apartment invasions by code enforcements,Ferman&Verbe go there!

Reply

dvawareness

4:14 pm on Saturday, January 19, 2013

30 years for downloading articles. 5 years for killing wife. WOW!

Reply

John Q. Public

5:11 pm on Saturday, January 19, 2013

Good lawyers are well-paid to ensure justice is not served.

Reply

matt

9:30 am on Monday, January 21, 2013

The judge gave him the max for what he was charged for. It was the D.A. that cut the deal that screwed this up.

Reply

floyd prince

5:27 pm on Monday, January 21, 2013

It's very sickning that this guy recieved a plea agreement for murder and got 5 to 10 years! why because of his skin color. but me as a black man for a drug charge got 7 to 15 years there is no way that the justice system in pennsylvania/montgomery county is fair. And Ms. ferman along with Bruce Castor needs to be kicked in the rare end for being racist when it comes to being fair!

Reply

John Q. Public

5:49 pm on Monday, January 21, 2013

Floyd Prince, race has NOTHING to do with it, but your lawyer does. Look at OJ, got away with double homicide. A good, expensive lawyer will ensure justice is never served. If you got hosed, blame your lawyer.

Reply

jxjipper

8:25 pm on Monday, January 21, 2013

I guess the moral of the story is Don't do Drugs.

Reply

Jennifer

3:44 pm on Wednesday, January 23, 2013

I really don't understand how someone who murders someone with a blunt object and bashes their head only gets 5-10 years. Was it because he did it out of anger that changes the game of murder with intent?

Reply

matt

3:52 pm on Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Jennifer - It has something to do with the deal that the DA cut at the time. I don't really know the details, nor am I a lawyer, but as I understand it the guy cut a deal with the DA and the judge gave him the max sentence per the charge he agreed to.

Reply

Leave a comment