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Connecticut Parole Board Pardons Illegal Migrant Pedophile Who Says He Might Re-Offend
A convicted pedophile and illegal migrant was released from a Connecticut prison last month after his sympathetic parole board mulled how to best help him avoid deportation.
The Trump administration, the parole board decided, would not be able to get its act together fast enough to deport the illegal migrant pedophile before his 30-day immigration detainer runs out. “They can’t elect a Speaker of the House,” one board member scoffed.
Guerino Magloire, 52, was serving five years in prison for felony second degree sexual assault against a child between 13 and 15 years old. He was convicted of sexually assaulting the child on March 11, 2020, just as pandemic lockdowns were starting, and he was sentenced in November the next year.
During his parole hearing on New Year’s Eve, Magloire said he cannot promise he will not offend again.
“I can’t say I promise that it’s not going to happen because that’s not always a thing, when you say, ‘Oh I promise,'” Magloire told the parole board. “No, I’m not going to say I promise, but I will definitely try to do my best, my best to keep myself away from situations like that again.”
Magloire scored as a moderate to high risk on an evaluation used to predict whether a male sexual offender will reoffend.
Despite those red flags, the parole board released him that day from Carl Robinson Correctional Institution north of Hartford.
"I can't say I promise It's not going to happen" His words to the parole board. He can't promise he won't offend against children again. pic.twitter.com/lhd7jyfrzk
— Mandoo (@Mandoo95431769) January 13, 2025
When the S3X offender realizes Trump Means Business. pic.twitter.com/sVvNtSiiii
— Mandoo (@Mandoo95431769) January 13, 2025
Magloire is in the country illegally. He came to the United States from Haiti in 1984 when he was 11 and currently has an immigration detainer, meaning Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is ready to deport him as soon as he is released from prison.
His parole board lamented the situation. The board included two women, Rufaro Berry and Deborah Smith-Palmieri, and one man, Michael Pohl.
“Unfortunately the person who’s taking over our current administration, he’s going to make sure that people like yourself are deported back,” Berry told Magloire. “It’s unfortunate that I think that the moment that we say that you’re going to be granted, or if we grant your discretionary parole, the process will begin.”
“I want to be perfectly clear,” she told the convict. “If we grant your discretionary parole today, you’ll be transported to a halfway house where you’ll wait for ICE to pick you up, and you will be returned. You won’t reunite with your family. That’s not going to happen, sir.”
“Oh, so they’re going to take me right back?” Magloire asked.
“They’re going to take you right back in a matter of days,” Berry responded.
“So even though the country is in turmoil the way it is?” he said.
“That’s not our concern. That’s out of our control,” she said.
Magloire shook his head.
“Yeah,” Berry said.
Berry suggested Magloire might have a better chance of fighting his deportation detainer in prison than if he is “sent out of the country and trying to get back.”
However, another board member, Pohl pushed back with a different perspective.
“So my take on this is that we parole him today because they can’t elect a Speaker of the House — I don’t think the Trump administration is going to be in a position in the next 30 days, which is what they hold him, to deport him,” Pohl said.
Berry responded enthusiastically — “Really!” — when she learned the ICE detainer would last only 30 days rather than 90.
“I don’t want to make less of what happened in this offense,” Pohl added quickly.
“No, of course not,” Berry said.
The board took a brief recess to speak with the detainer supervisor and questioned Magloire about where he was in the process of fighting the deportation order.
In the end, all three parole board members agreed to release Magloire, deciding he would have the “best opportunity to dispute this immigration detainer if he is granted discretionary parole.”
Magloire sobbed and folded his hands, saying, “Thank you, I will not disappoint you again, I will not let this happen.”
“I cannot be in here no more,” he said.
Magloire was on the sex offender registry as far back as two decades ago. In 1998, he was convicted of injury or risk of injury to or impairing the morals of children.
That did not stop him from trying to get a job as a custodian at an elementary school a few years later in 2007 and even showing up to the school, causing an uproar among parents.
Stamford police said they found evidence Magloire may have worked one day at Newfield Elementary School before his background checks were complete. The school district denied this, claiming Magloire showed up before he was hired.
Magloire’s current offense happened in the Waterbury area, where local police arrested him and the city’s courts convicted him after he pled guilty, according to the parole hearing docket and inmate information from the Connecticut Department of Correction.
He was originally denied parole in May of 2023.
At several points during Magloire’s recent parole hearing, board members appeared to appreciate the serious nature of the situation.
Both Berry and Pohl expressed concern with Magloire saying he cannot promise not to offend again.
Magloire had stated, “I did say that I can’t promise not making a mistake.”
“For you to sit here and say that I can’t make that promise, while I respect your being honest, I really struggle with that statement because nobody else’s child deserves to suffer through this ever again,” Berry said.
When Magloire blamed his offense on drinking alcohol and “being around certain friends,” Berry pointed out that while alcohol might lower his inhibitions, “you already had those thoughts in your head about sexually offending.”
However, none of the board’s concerns were enough to deny his parole.
Smith-Palmieri noted that Magloire completed a sex offender program and “got all he could out of the program” despite some “intellectual deficiencies” that may have interfered.
“I feel so remorseful for the pain of the child that I made a mistake on,” Magloire said, asking the parole board to tell the child’s mother that “I apologize for that.”
“At the time I wasn’t thinking too well, clearly,” he said, but now he has a “clear mind not to do the wrong.”
At least one of the parole board members is open about his political leanings online.
Pohl is also the chairman of the Manchester Democrats, and an X account that appears to belong to him is a hodgepodge of Democrat retweets, as well as a retweet of a post about Connecticut’s prison population being at a nearly two-decade low.
Pohl also apparently posted “Class” in response to Bill Clinton wishing Joe Biden a happy birthday and in another post, “Don’t ever let them forget what happened” on January 6, saying local Republican leaders remained silent.