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Tripe child-killer Allan Schoenborn has been granted the right to escorted day passes from his psychiatric facility in Coquitlam, according to a spokesperson for his victims’ family.

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Dave Teixeira, who speaks for the children’s mother Darcie Clarke, confirmed on Friday that a B.C. review board had granted Schoenborn leave into the community.

Schoenborn stabbed his 10-year-old daughter Kaitlynne and smothered his sons Max and Cordon at their family home in Merritt in April 2008.

He was found not criminally responsible at trial because he was experiencing psychosis at the time.

LISTEN: Triple child-killer Allan Schoenborn granted escorted day passes

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He has been living at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital, better known as Colony Farm, since then. The facility houses offenders found not mentally fit to stand trial, or not criminal for psychological reasons.

WATCH: How are offenders deemed fit for escorted day passes?

Clarke expressed outrage in a statement released on Friday night.

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“He could be in our community at any time without the public’s knowledge because the Review Board does not have the public’s safety as their paramount concern. I live in the Tri-Cities and I will now live in consistent fear that he will move ahead with his threats against me, because as he has said, I am ‘unfinished business,'” she wrote.

READ MORE: Appeal of Allan Schoenborn day pass decision denied; ex-wife now lives in fear

“Allan’s own doctors do not believe he will be ready for years – if ever – to have such leave.”

Dave Teixeira, who speaks for the family, echoed those concerns.

“When he committed the murders almost 10 years ago, he spent 10 days hiding out from police, evading police in the woods,” he said.

“There is concern that he could escape and stay away and there’s also concern that he could harm Darcie and then there’s just the concern that he could harm other folks in the community.”

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Earlier this year, psychologist Dr. Marcel Hediger told a review board he would be unlikely to recommend supervised outings for Schoenborn, who he said was having problems managing his anger and coping with his emotions.

Back in 2015, the review board granted Schoenborn the right to escorted day passes, but he has never actually been let out of the hospital.

When the board made that decision, it said Schoenborn had been diagnosed as having a delusional disorder, a substance abuse disorder and paranoid personality traits — but that those issues had been in remission for several years.

Earlier this year, Crown prosecutors failed in a bid to have Schoenborn declared as a “high-risk accused.”

That designation, added to the criminal code in 2014, applies to people who have been declared not criminally responsible due to psychological reasons.

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The designation would have lengthened the period between Schoenborn’s review board appearances, and eliminated the possibility of him winning escorted day passes.

With files from the Canadian Press

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