Rally Launched to Keep N.Y. Cop Killer in Prison

May 30, 2012
For the seventh time since killing Nassau cop Matthew Giglio in 1975, John MacKenzie is being considered to be freed on parole.

May 30--For the seventh time since killing Nassau cop Matthew Giglio in 1975, John MacKenzie is being considered to be freed on parole.

And for the seventh time, Giglio's children and union are rallying to keep him locked up for good.

MacKenzie, who's served 36 years of a 25-years-to-life prison sentence upstate for shooting Giglio, 35, in a botched burglary in West Hempstead, is eligible to appear before a parole board every two years and ask that he be released.

Giglio died an agonizing death, spending his final weeks in the hospital with a ruptured colon and aorta and an amputated leg. Ten weeks after the October 1975 shooting, Giglio, a Nassau County cop for 11 years, became the 24th Nassau police officer to die from injuries sustained in the line of duty. He was survived by a wife and three children.

Losing a parent for anyone is terrible, but "to lose a parent at the hands of a madman like John MacKenzie makes it tremendously worse," said Doreen Giglio Velardi, of New Jersey, who was 10 at the time of her father's slaying.

Giglio's three children appeared at the union's headquarters in Mineola, showing an album of photos of their father and newspaper clippings about the case.

MacKenzie has said he'd be a model parolee based on his spotless disciplinary history in prison, along with good deeds, higher-education degrees and profound regret.

Prison system spokeswoman Linda Foglia confirmed MacKenzie has never had a disciplinary write-up since the department has computerized records dating to the 1980s.

The union and Giglio's family said MacKenzie should be imprisoned as long as Giglio is gone: forever.

"Deny MacKenzie the right to ever see the outside of a jail cell again in his life, just like the family of Police Officer Giglio will never see him again," said James Carver, president of Giglio's union, the Nassau Police Benevolent Association, which represents rank-and-file officers.

In a 2008 interview with Newsday at the medium-security Woodbourne Correctional Facility, where he remains imprisoned, MacKenzie, now 65, wept and said that he regretted what he did at age 29 -- that he's worked with inmates to show them how their crimes affect victims.

But he said he's consigned to die in prison because he believes no parole official will take a politically untenable position to release a man who has slain a police officer.

"I can't ask for fairness. I can't ask for forgiveness. I can't ask for compassion. I can't ask for understanding," he said. "And why? Because it's going to fall on deaf ears."

He's been denied parole six previous times.

Foglia, the prison system spokeswoman, said the latest hearing is scheduled for the week of June 11 and a decision is expected by the end of that week.

Asked during the Newsday interview, MacKenzie called his odds of being granted parole "a snowball's chance in hell."

Copyright 2012 - Newsday, Melville, N.Y.

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