Caught off guard when a man convicted of killing a police officer was paroled last fall, a group of law enforcement officials and politicians have coordinated an effort against parole for another cop killer before his parole hearing next week.
Hennepin County Sheriff Rich Stanek and the heads of the state's sheriff and police chief associations, led an e-mail and letter-writing campaign to the Department of Corrections to deny parole for Ronald Schneider, who killed Robbinsdale officer John Scanlon in 1985.
For Stanek, making sure Schneider spends the rest of his life in prison has become personal. Scanlon's funeral was the first police officer funeral Stanek ever attended. With Schneider, now 70, up for parole on Monday, Stanek made a point to share his thoughts with state Corrections Commissioner Tom Roy this week.
Stanek said law enforcement was caught by surprise when Roy granted parole to Tim Eling, who killed an off-duty officer in 1982. Roy's decision sparked controversy among legislators and police officials.
This is Schneider's second parole hearing. Only a handful of people convicted of killing an officer remain eligible for parole because a 1993 state law change requires life without parole for such an offense.
"Denying the parole request sends a clear message that the killing of police officers -- our first line of defense and protectors of our society -- is both unacceptable and unforgivable," Stanek wrote in a letter to the Department of Corrections. "He remains a threat to society, having shown no remorse for his actions, and it would be a mistake to grant his release."
Monday's hearing, which is closed, will most likely consist of Roy, two of his deputies, the warden from Stillwater prison and several professionals with knowledge of Schneider's case. Several of Schneider's relatives will also speak. Schneider is expected to plead his own case.
This hearing was ordered by the corrections commissioner who handled Schneider's hearing 10 years ago.