Sentence increased for Calgary man who strangled wife and entombed her in concrete - Action News
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Sentence increased for Calgary man who strangled wife and entombed her in concrete

The Calgary father who strangled his wife and hid her body in their basement where he lived with their children for a year before he was caught will spend more time in prison.

Allan Shyback was convicted of manslaughter and indignity to a body in 2017

Allan Shyback killed his common-law wife Lisa Mitchell in 2012. The Alberta Court of Appeal has increased his sentence from seven to 10 years. (Meghan Grant/CBC)

The Calgary father who strangled his wife and hid her body in their basement where he lived with their children for a year before he was caught will spend more time in prison.

On Thursday, the Alberta Court of Appeal increased Allan Shyback's sentence from seven to 10 years after hearing arguments from prosecutor Sarah Clive and defence lawyer Balfour Der last week.

The panel of judges found Shyback's sentence was "demonstrably unfit having regard to the gravity of the offence and the degree of responsibility of the respondent."

Originally charged with second-degree murder, Shyback was convicted in 2017 of manslaughter and indignity toLisa Mitchell'sbody.

Shyback received a five-year sentence for the manslaughter convictionplus two years to be served consecutively for indignity to a body.

In 2012, Shyback strangledMitchellduring an argument and then tried to cover up his crime by placing Mitchell'sremains in a Rubbermaid container and cementing it into a wall in the corner of thebasement.

In its decision, the Court of Appeal called the offender's next moves his "long deception." Shybackkept up lies that Mitchell had disappeared, causing her family and children years of false hope and anguish.

Lisa Mitchell's body was found by police two years after she disappeared. Her body was inside a plastic bin that had been covered by cement in a corner of the couple's basement. (Court exhibit)

During his trial, Shybacktoldthe court he'd been the victim of domestic abuse for years and, on the day of the fatal argument, Mitchell came at him with a knife.

Mitchell was last seen in Calgary in October 2012. An undercover police operation started in 2013 and ended with Shyback's confession and arrest in Winnipeg a year later.

He told undercover officers he panicked when he realized he had killed Mitchell and was afraid that if he called police, his children would be taken away.

After the confession, police recovered Mitchell's remains.

The prosecution originally proposed a 13- to 15-year sentence for the two convictions. Defence lawyer Der argued for a five-year prison sentence.

The couple's children now live with their maternal grandmother.