Kitchener-Waterloo

Man guilty of UW stabbing to spend more time behind bars after judge miscalculated sentence

Geovanny Villalba-Aleman, 25, pleaded guilty to a June 2023 attack on the University of Waterloo campus that left a professor and two students with stab wounds. Now, a judge has said he will need to spend more time behind bars.

Corrected sentence increases time behind bars to 8 years and 5 months

man smiling with glasses
A former University of Waterloo student has been sentenced to 11 years in prison for hate-motivated stabbings in a gender-studies classroom on the southern Ontario campus in 2023. Geovanny Villalba-Aleman, 25, pleaded guilty in June 2024. He was sentenced in March, but the judge in the case made an error in calculating time served in pre-trial custody. He will now serve more than eight year. (Geovanny Villalba-Aleman/Facebook)

The man behind a mass stabbing in a University of Waterloo gender studies class will have to stay behind bars longer after an Ontario judge recalculated how much to deduct for the time he had already spent in custody.

Geovanny Villalba-Aleman was sentenced last month to 11 years in prison for what Ontario Court Justice Frances Brennan deemed a "particularly grave" hate crime targeting the 2SLGBTQ+ community.

At the time, Brennan said Villalba-Aleman would be given credit for 1,254 days of pre-sentence custody, leaving him to serve nearly seven years and seven months behind bars.

Federal prosecutors confirmed Brennan corrected what she deemed a mathematical error on Monday, saying he should instead get credit for 941 days.

That would leave him with about eight years and five months to serve.

Villalba-Aleman, 25, had pleaded guilty to two counts of aggravated assault, one count of assault with a weapon and one count of assault causing bodily harm in the June 2023 attack that left a professor and two students with stab wounds.

Crown attorneys had argued the attack amounted to terrorist activity, but Brennan found the evidence didn't prove beyond a reasonable doubt that his hatred toward the LGBTQ+ community had crystallized into an ideology.

One of the elements of terrorism under Canadian law is that the offence must have been committed for a political, religious or ideological purpose.