Kenneth Ratte

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Kenneth Ratte
Born1963 (age 60–61)
NationalityCanadian
Known forThreatening to infect prison guards and fellow inmates with AIDS

Kenneth Ratte is a Canadian citizen, who has been called a "career criminal".[1] He has been convicted of over 60 crimes.

In 1991, he was identified as one of 34 convicts in custody in Canadian prisons who had been diagnosed with an AIDS infection.[2] In 1991 guards, calling upon the terms of their union's contract, argued that Ratte should be kept in isolation, because his infection posed a risk to their health.[3] Ratte argued that this segregation violated his rights.

In 2000, Ratte was convicted of attacking guards, and trying to infect them.[4] CBC News reported that Ratte requested a longer sentence so he would be held in federal, rather than provincial, custody, on the basis of being too dangerous for the latter.[5] Ratte was escorted to court by four guards wearing body armour, gloves and protective eye-guards. Each guard was holding a leash attached to a collar.[citation needed]

In 2010, Ratte and two associates were convicted of a home invasion.[1] Ratte agreed to testify against Tracy L. Caron, a Kingston area woman, who was charged with trying to hire someone to hurt Clifford Richards. Richards was murdered on 26 October 2010, at which time Ratte was already in custody, but he testified she discussed hiring someone to hurt Richards before Ratte's apprehension.

In June 2013, Ratte attacked Omar Khadr shortly after Khadr had been transferred to a prison in Edmonton.[6]

Ratte received conditional release in March 2018.[7] He was released under a peace bond that imposed an 11pm to 6am curfew upon him. After Ratte stayed out one night he asked a friend to phone his wife, and tell her he missed the curfew because he had been kidnapped by bikers. His wife took this story seriously, and informed police, and filed a missing person report. However, her daughter found him later that day, in their neighbourhood, smoking crystal meth. Ratte spent the next five months in jail.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Sue Yanagisawa (27 February 2013). "Woman admits guilt in hurt-for-hire plot". Kingston Whig Standard. Retrieved 5 July 2013. Instead, Foxton told the judge, Caron plotted with Kenneth Ratte, a career criminal and drug abuser, offering to pay him to inflict injury on Richards.
  2. ^ "AIDS-infected convicts suing Ottawa". Kitchener-Waterloo Record. 3 March 1991. p. D.4. Retrieved 5 July 2013. There are 34 federal inmates with the AIDS virus and only one is isolation for disciplinary reasons – not [Kenneth Ratte] or [Robert Sklepowich], [Andy Roy] said.
  3. ^ Stephen Bindman (1 August 1991). "AIDS-infected convicts suing Ottawa". Kitchener-Waterloo Record. p. A.6. Retrieved 5 July 2013. Correctional officers involved with Ratte have twice threatened to invoke a Canada Labor Code section allowing them to refuse dangerous work. Ratte's isolation was therefore necessary to protect staff and other inmates, federal lawyers say
  4. ^ "Prisoner with HIV pleads guilty". CBC News. 20 December 2000. Retrieved 5 July 2013. An inmate who is HIV positive has pleaded guilty to spitting at a guard and to head-butting a guard at the Kingston Penitentiary. Kenneth Ratte also threatened to throw his blood on prison staff.
  5. ^ "Ontario: Spitting inmate requests at least two years in prison". Canadian HIV/AIDS Policy and Law Review. Vol. 6, no. 1. 2001. pp. 20–21. Archived from the original on 18 October 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2013. He pleaded "definitely guilty" to the charges and asked the court to give him a sentence of more than two years to ensure he was incarcerated in a federal institution, saying that he considered himself too dangerous an offender for a provincial institution.
  6. ^ Gary Dimmock (5 July 2013). "Omar Khadr assaulted at Edmonton prison". Ottawa Citizen. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 5 July 2013. The guards then escorted Khadr and his alleged attacker, Kenneth Ratte, to segregation units. Khadr was not seriously injured, according to staff at the prison.
  7. ^ Susan Yanagisawa (2019-06-17). "Whopper triggers search, discloses breach". Kingston Whig Standard. Retrieved 2019-10-08. A 52-year-old Kingston man, released from prison in March 2018 and immediately placed on a public safety peace bond because of his record for violence, ended up spending the last five months of it back in jail because of an inexplicable but dramatic lie.