Pubdate: Mon, 22 Jan 2007
Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN)
Copyright: 2007 The StarPhoenix
Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400
Author: James Wood, The StarPhoenix

'UNCONDITIONAL LOVE'

Walker's Daughter Willing to Do Anything to Help Her Dad

YORKTON -- If Jadah Walker truly owes her life to her father, she is 
repaying that debt to her family and to other families scarred by drugs.

A day after a jury found 50-year-old Kim Walker guilty of 
second-degree murder, Jadah returned to some aspects -- the small 
apartment she shares with her boyfriend, the manager's job she holds 
at Carlton Cards -- of the normal life she's tried to build in the 
four years after her father shot dead her drug-dealer boyfriend, James Hayward.

But on that same day, she and her mother, Liz, dropped off items such 
as chocolate bars and magazines for Walker at the RCMP cells, where 
he has begun the minimum 10 years incarceration before the 
possibility of parole in his life sentence.

"Anything that my family wants, I will do," said Jadah, 20, in an 
interview Saturday.

Sitting with a coffee at her kitchen table, Jadah said she will speak 
out whenever she can because she wants people to learn from the case.

Many people have had their eyes closed to the drug problem that 
exists, including the police, she said. Jadah feels the system failed 
her parents -- that if the police had arrested Hayward earlier or had 
better responded to the concerns they raised, Walker wouldn't be 
behind bars today.

Her case also shows the value of unconditional love" for children in 
crisis, said Jadah.

"I don't want a situation like this to happen to anybody else," she said.

"You can never ever turn somebody away. . . . I would never have 
lived through this without the support of my parents." The Walker 
case has attracted national attention because of its disturbing circumstances.

Many people in the eastern Saskatchewan city of 17,000 and from 
across the country have offered their support for Walker, a welder 
and father of three who played the bagpipes and belonged to a gun 
club in his spare time.

Many view him as the defence painted him -- a concerned father 
desperate to extricate his 16-year-old daughter from potentially 
fatal addiction and a toxic relationship with an older man.

It's a view that troubles the friends and family of Hayward, who was 
24 at the time he died.

They point out James is no longer around to defend himself.

"A lot of people loved James and he had many great qualities 
regardless of the way he earned money. James was a caring, funny, 
supportive and compassionate person," said Hayward's stepsister, 
Alana Getty, in a prepared statement on Friday just a few hours 
before the verdict was delivered.

"No one knows what might have happened if James had not been killed.

Perhaps they both could have been saved, but no one was given the 
opportunity to save James. . . . Drug addiction is a serious and 
difficult problem to resolve. They had just begun to work on Jadah's 
rehabilitation when Mr. Walker took this extreme action."

Jadah says she would have died if she had continued living with 
Hayward for even a few more weeks. She was 13 when she began smoking 
marijuana and she first met Hayward, who was eight years older, when 
a friend suggested they buy pot from him.

Hayward was a well-known figure around Yorkton, a bodybuilder known 
to be selling drugs.

Jadah was 15 when she became involved with him. When her relationship 
with her parents deteriorated over changes to her behaviour and her 
attitude to school, she moved out of her home and moved in with Hayward.

She has few kind words for him now and struggles to describe the 
attraction at the time.

"He would walk around and have people with him and he would always be 
at the front of the pack, Mr. Big Shot in a tight shirt," she said.

Living with him in late 2002 and early 2003, her marijuana use 
escalated and she also began using ecstasy and mushrooms. Eventually, 
she joined Hayward in injecting morphine.

"We were staying at somebody's house and all of a sudden these two 
strange men came and they just started cooking it up," Jadah said of 
her first time using the drug.

"Somehow he encouraged me to try it and persuaded me into doing it 
that one time and it only seems like that one time and you're hooked 
on it. . . . He was always doing it and he was always getting me to 
do it and so it became something I needed to function." Months of 
growing concern from her parents culminated when they received an 
anonymous letter telling them of Jadah and Hayward's morphine use.

After going to the RCMP, they received a court order that committed 
Jadah -- who had lost a great deal of weight and was increasingly 
zombielike but was still attending school -- to the psychiatric ward 
of the Yorkton hospital for assessment for the weekend.

"At the time I was like, 'Why would you do that to me?'. . . . I was 
angry they would put me in with the crazy people," she said, adding, 
however, she was not "in a hurry" to go back to Hayward's home when 
she was released.

On March 17, 2003, the day she was released to her parents, she was 
picked up by friends at her parent's home and reunited with Hayward.

Hearing that, Walker left his home with a semi-automatic pistol and 
30 rounds of ammunition. Almost immediately after entering Hayward's 
house and asking a resistant Jadah to come home, he fired 10 shots.

Hayward bled to death from five gunshot wounds, including one in the 
back at close range.

Walker testifi ed he did not intend to kill Hayward but said he 
remembered only "flashes" of the day and nothing of the actual shooting.

Jadah, suffering from lack of food and sleep as she had withdrawals 
from morphine, said she too remembers little of the shooting.

In the aftermath, she said it took months to get back to normal, but 
she was never estranged from her parents.

Walker was free on bail for almost the entire time since the shooting 
until he was taken into custody Friday.

With no more supply, Jadah stopped using morphine on her own, 
refusing to go into rehab.

"In the condition I was in, I was like, 'How would it make me any 
better to go be with a lot of cracked out strangers? My family can at 
the least build me up.' " Jadah smoked marijuana a few more times but 
then quit using drugs completely.

After a couple of months, she went back to school. She graduated from 
high school, began work and eventually wants to go back to school to 
take business courses.

But the family must now deal with Walker beginning incarceration that 
will likely see him end up in the Prince Albert penitentiary.

Defence lawyer Morris Bodnar said Sunday he will work on his appeal this week.

It will be based on Justice Jennifer Pritchard's refusal to allow the 
defence of self-defence and her charge to the jury that a finding of 
guilty of at least manslaughter had to be found.

Jadah said the family knows the case isn't over.

"I love my dad. It breaks my heart to see him in jail," she said.
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