A day after the second anniversary of the impaired driving crash that claimed the lives of three Neville-Lake children and their grandfather, Global News is reporting that Marco Muzzo has been moved to a minimum security prison as he likely prepares to apply to leave the prison unattended in October.

On Sept. 26 Jennifer Neville-Lake wrote a tribute to all three of her children Daniel, 9, Harry, 5, and Milly, 2, on Facebook in a post that has been shared more than 2,000 times.

“Another year is dead and gone,” she wrote. “Another year and I’m still here. Another year of every day hearing how many others have joined this gruesome family I was forced into, made up of victims of impaired driving.”

Also killed during the 2015 Vaughan crash was Neville-Lake’s father Gary Neville, 69. Badly injured were her mother Neriza Neville and grandmother Josefina Frias.

The anniversary and post come as Muzzo appears to be benefiting from prison rules to help inmates re-integrate into the community.

Despite being sentenced to 10 years a year-and-a-half ago, on March 29, 2016 for impaired driving, Muzzo can apply for “unescorted temporary absences” on Oct. 18.

They can be granted by the prison's warden, according to Corrections Canada spokesman Kyle Lawlor.

Muzzo was moved from a medium to a minimum security prison last week, according to Global News, however Corrections Canada refuses to confirm this or the name of the prison where he is being held.

Preparedness for a minimum security prison, which has no fences, but does have boundaries, is decided on three factors, according to Corrections Canada – an inmate's risk to the public, their flight risk and institutional behavior.

YorkRegion.com repeatedly asked Corrections Canada why the details of Muzzo's imprisonment are being withheld from the public, but was told information could not be released under the Privacy Act. They would not give the location or even security level of the prison where he is being held.