Dad killed drug pusher to save addict daughter (Updated 4/12/07)

"Dirty scumbag"

99% of women have absolutely no loyalty at all period.

Whoever is talking at the current moment is always right.

"He is my boyfriend, I love him, and I use him for drugs like a filthy whore!"

"Oh, what? He is a bad guy? OK!"
 
Did any one else notice how the article starts off with how he "rescued his daughter from addiction" and how the morality of the situation is implicitly stated as opposed to any morals regarding any actions being secondary towards those actions?
 
Yeh and I'll bet she had lots of fun being rescued from addiction with her boyfriend bleeding shot to death next to her and her father yelling insanity at her.
 
ashamedofhometown said:
I'm ashamed to come from a community that is filled with such IGNORANCE... such as yourself. And like I said I left immediatly after high school. And it had nothing to do with 'running and hiding' from anything. It had to do with getting the best education possible and starting the best career possible. And being in a province and a city where making money is actually an option. Some people can settle and be happy working at the local smalltown mall and others move on to bigger things. Don't be jealous of that.. you've obviously chosen to stay... good for you... gotta keep that population up. But I would NEVER consider raising my family in that little dump.

So, you can hurl your insults all you want. But quite frankly, there is no reason to be hurling insults to a family of a murdered man. And the mans dead... no point of hurling insults at him either. He's up in heavan right now sitting next to God smiling because just a little bit of justice has been served.

As for the rest of us on here... lets just HOPE that there will be an appeal... and the final result of that is a verdict of first degree murder. And then justice will truly be served.

Well doodle for u bub.
I'm ashamed to come from a community that is filled with such IGNORANCE... such as yourself.QUOTE] IGNORANCE? Nope not at all he was scum plain and simple and another thing you assume wrong here I AM NOT FROM THERE FYI . SO there nothing to be jealous of.Big whop for u that u left and deemed this community a dump .... Maybe the people around there know u and say good ridense!so what u wanna make the bigger bucks,go right ahead,so u can't whine bag about the higher cost of living,higher taxes u pay,the long commute u make to work.Go for it suck it up.And don't say that i'm the only one here hurling insults,to me this whole thread has been nothing but insulting,so dont be pointing fingers at me alone.
By the words you say here,sounds to me like your either related to this family or perhaps a past customer.?.

He's up in heavan right now sitting next to God smiling because just a little bit of justice has been served.
Hmm.. thats real funny bringing religion into this as u did in another post of yours.I didnt know god approved of people selling drugs to 13 yr olds.What bible do u read from? i havent seen that script in the one i read.

So you go back to your productive little world there bask in the glory of the wonderful life you have there and wonder how this "dump" of a city ever survived with out you.

To the Walkers....keep your head up and your heart strong Mr Walker will be a free man soon enough! HORAH!
 
lurkerguy said:
"Dirty scumbag"

99% of women have absolutely no loyalty at all period.

Whoever is talking at the current moment is always right.

"He is my boyfriend, I love him, and I use him for drugs like a filthy whore!"

"Oh, what? He is a bad guy? OK!"


hahahaha, LMFAo....but make that 95% there is some good ones ;)

thats some funny shit just what i was thinking....wtf kind of bitch could 'cradle his head in her arms as he was dying" and then turn right around and be like "OMG my daddy is my hero cuz he killed the bad man!" WTF?!? thas some fuckd up shit.
 
Exactly.

The most lazy, worthless person in this entire situation, the one who pulled absolutely no weight, couldn't even sell drugs to support her own habit, ends up being portrayed as the biggest victim.

If it wasn't for this poor murdered man supplying this guy's leach of a daughter with drugs, she would probably be out on the streets giving blow jobs for dime bags, and be infected with AIDS right now.

However, because she was lucky enough to have a generous STD free boyfriend who was willing to supply her with all her drugs, she made it through her "addiction" with no financial or emotional damage done at all.
 
lurkerguy said:
she made it through her "addiction" with no financial or emotional damage done at all.

She watched her boyfriend die in front of her and her father go to prison.
 
That was because her dad is a nut job, not because she was taking morphine everyday.

If she had to pay for all the morphine she took it would have been much worse either way, she would be broke, and probably be a prostitute.

In fact I wouldn't be at all surprised if that is what happens to her now that she has been cut off from her free drug supply.
 
Either way, its bound to cause severe emotional trauma. What would be really tragic is if she goes back to it after all of this happening, to cope.
 
Edvard Munch said:
Did any one else notice how the article starts off with how he "rescued his daughter from addiction" and how the morality of the situation is implicitly stated as opposed to any morals regarding any actions being secondary towards those actions?

Yeah...I notice it with all media but in all the articles regarding this case it is almost disgusting how much they skewed basic morales.
Def a crime of passion he did not have a plan to go about killing this guy. He was going to a known drug and violent crime offender's house. Even without that the whole act of getting the gun to the murder is a crime of passion with this situation. He should be away for longer than parole in ten though probably alot of the jurors were parents and seeing it one sided just like most of the media.
 
They"the Walkers" tried every means possible that were available to them.
-the law did nothing.Whoopie a 3 day court order.
how come no court order to restrain him for contacting her?
-i dont recall that being discussed. were they not given that option?
Oh right, they did everything they possibly could. There were no more options. Seriously. Had to kill the guy.

Why was he still allowed to live the life of leisure after being convicted of how many offences? He belonged in prison .... or sent to a clinic to turn his life around..For crying out loud ...there were people being tossed in a cage for unpaid traffic tickets.Which is the worse of the 2 evils here?

When you paint someone as a monster, it's very easy to objectify and effectively write off their existance. You're doing a great job here. Though it's already pretty easy in the way that the media has demonized this man.

-she was about 16 when this all took place? so she may have been a lil naive here, peer pressure may have gotten the better of her or maybe better yet maybe she just gave in just to part of the so called in group? Now....my question to all of u ..how many of you did things you knew were not right but did it just to fit in or be with the in crowd? How many of you disobeyed your parents and went against the grain knowing how much it would piss them off?
-and dont say you were all saints here ... coz me myself have been there done that.

Sure, I've done that. But never, ever, would I respect my parents for annihilating all symptoms of my acts instead of sitting me down and explaining why they're concerned, and how to safely diffuse the situation and get to the core of the problem. If I had a horrible driving record and injured myself repeatedly getting into car crashes, would my father blow up my car? No. He would take the goddamn keys away for a long ass time until (if ever) I could learn to drive safely.

So this is not a matter of double standard.This just goes to show you what happens when the system fails ...victim included.

Oh what a poor victim. Never had control of anything. The drug dealer would stop by her house, sling her over his shoulder, and carry her off to the opium den where she would be subject to horror. But good thing the righteous knight came and slew the dragon.

Yes, this is a double standard. You're supporting the solution of eliminating only one facet of the problem. Let's see here, can we draw conclusions on why this girl was an addict? Girl + drug dealer + drugs. And so the solution is to kill the drug dealer? I mean, personally I would have killed the girl or the drugs, but the only real solution here is to kill the girl, since she's so naive and helpless. Drug dealers and drugs will eventually get to her no matter what, so that's the best I can come up with in your line of thinking.

I really can't wait until the father gets off on parole in 10 years to find his daughter back on the smack. Because she's just a helpless victim.
 
StagnantReaction said:
Oh right, they did everything they possibly could. There were no more options. Seriously. Had to kill the guy.



When you paint someone as a monster, it's very easy to objectify and effectively write off their existance. You're doing a great job here. Though it's already pretty easy in the way that the media has demonized this man.



Sure, I've done that. But never, ever, would I respect my parents for annihilating all symptoms of my acts instead of sitting me down and explaining why they're concerned, and how to safely diffuse the situation and get to the core of the problem. If I had a horrible driving record and injured myself repeatedly getting into car crashes, would my father blow up my car? No. He would take the goddamn keys away for a long ass time until (if ever) I could learn to drive safely.



Oh what a poor victim. Never had control of anything. The drug dealer would stop by her house, sling her over his shoulder, and carry her off to the opium den where she would be subject to horror. But good thing the righteous knight came and slew the dragon.

Yes, this is a double standard. You're supporting the solution of eliminating only one facet of the problem. Let's see here, can we draw conclusions on why this girl was an addict? Girl + drug dealer + drugs. And so the solution is to kill the drug dealer? I mean, personally I would have killed the girl or the drugs, but the only real solution here is to kill the girl, since she's so naive and helpless. Drug dealers and drugs will eventually get to her no matter what, so that's the best I can come up with in your line of thinking.

I really can't wait until the father gets off on parole in 10 years to find his daughter back on the smack. Because she's just a helpless victim.


:| YAWN (HORAH)
 
Dad Who Killed Girl's Drug-dealing Boyfriend Says Family's Lives Ruined
Prince Albert Daily Herald (CN SN)
April 11, 2007

Prince Albert - A father who killed his 16-year-old drug-addicted daughter's boyfriend says he has nightmares about that fateful day four years ago.

In an interview at the Saskatchewan penitentiary, Kim Walker told the CTV News show The Verdict that he doesn't remember much the day he fired 10 shots at James Hayward, hitting him five times.

Walker was convicted last fall of second-degree murder for the 2003 shooting of Hayward and received a mandatory life sentence with no chance of parole for 10 years. He is appealing.

A jury heard how Walker's teenage daughter, Jadah, was living with Hayward in Yorkton in the months before the attack and using morphine with him.

"It was a culmination of so many different factors - the attempts we took, the steps we took to get her out of the drug house, our pleas to police were ignored,'' said Walker.

"I knew she would die ... she was being shot up with morphine and I know how deadly it is - all it would do is take a little overdose.''

Speaking slowly, his eyes welling with tears, Walker said he and his wife, Elizabeth, didn't realize at first that Jadah was on drugs. However, he said it wasn't long before they were constantly arguing with her.

"She was calling us by our first names. When the police came they said, 'Does she always treat you like this?' and we said, 'no, not always.' The police said we should practise tough love.''

However, he said Jadah left the house, going to a place "Hayward had set up.''

Walker and his wife would pick her up for lunch a few times a week and try to convince her to come home.

CTV said relatives of Hayward declined to be interviewed for the program.

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