Nova Scotia

Internet Black Widow's victims concerned over her release in Nova Scotia

Two men preyed upon by a woman known as the internet black widow say they fear for public safety as a Nova Scotia prison prepares to release her at the end of this month.

Melissa Ann Shepard spiked her newlywed husband's coffee with tranquilizers in 2012

Melissa Ann Shepard, who was sentenced in Supreme Court in Sydney in June 2013, is set to be released from prison later this month. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

Two men preyed upon by a woman known as the Internet Black Widow say they fear for public safety as a Nova Scotia prison prepares to release her at the end of this month.

Melissa Ann Shepard, now in her early 80s, was sentenced in June 2013 to two years, nine months and 10 days in prison for spiking her newlywed husband's coffee with tranquilizers.

Correctional Service Canada says Shepard gets out of jail on March 20, after being refused early release by the Parole Board of Canada late last fall.

Fred Weeks, who was 76 when Shepard was sentenced, said in a telephone interview from his home in Stellarton that he believes Shepard isn't trustworthy and he doesn't want her near his community.

"She's too smooth of an actor," said Weeks, now in his late 70s.

"She kept me in the dark for a long time, telling me her stories. Everything was a story. Everything was a lie that she told me.

"I wouldn't want her to come around myself or any friends."

Cocktail of sedatives in coffee

Shepard pleaded guilty to administering a noxious substance and failing to provide the necessities of life to Weeks after a trial in Sydney in 2013. The conviction came after the Crown dropped a charge of attempted murder, saying there wasn't enough evidence to prove the case.

An agreed statement of facts released at the sentencing said Shepard had been Weeks's neighbour in a quiet retirement community, knocked on his door and told him she was lonely and she'd heard he was lonely too.

A civil union ceremony was performed in Weeks's living room in September 2012, but the marriage was never certified by the province.

During a trip to Newfoundland after the ceremony, Shepard dissolved a cocktail of sedatives into her new partner's coffee.

Evidence at the trial said after receiving the drugs, Weeks couldn't distinguish between reverse and drive shifts in his car and couldn't start his vehicle.

Victim tumbled out of bed

The couple returned to North Sydney, N.S., and stayed at a bed and breakfast, where Weeks tumbled out of bed and was hospitalized, with tests showing he had tranquilizers in his blood.

Shepard, born in Burnt Church, N.B., is known as the Black Widow or the Internet Black Widow because she has prior convictions stemming from her past relationships.

She was convicted of manslaughter in 1992 in the death of her second husband, Gordon Stewart, who she drugged and ran over twice with a car.

In 2005, Shepard — who has gone by several other surnames — was sentenced to five years in prison on seven counts of theft from a man in Florida who she had met online. Alex Strategos, now 83, said she stole $20,000 from him over the month that they lived together.

"I just don't want her playing this game with some other guy," he said in an interview from his home in Pinellas Park, Fla., on Tuesday.

Police force informed

A spokeswoman for the Halifax Regional Police said the force had been informed that Shepard would move to Halifax.

Const. Dianne Woodworth said officers have met with the community notification advisory committee, which can recommend notification of the public about high-risk offenders.

She says the ultimate decision lies with the chief of police and "this decision will be made once we know for certain that the individual will in fact be residing in Halifax."

When the parole board refused Shepard's release, the decision said she has a tendency to fabricate and deny events to correctional staff, and is unable to link consequences to actions.

The board has determined her risk of reoffending in a violent way was unchanged.