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Former Ont. fire captain not eligible for parole for 20 years for wife’s murder

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Former fire captain James Schwalm is sentenced for his wife’s murder.

Warning: Readers may find details in this article disturbing.

A former fire captain convicted of killing his wife of 11 years and burning her body inside her car was sentenced on Monday to life in prison with no chance of parole for 20 years.

Court documents reveal James Schwalm strangled his wife, Ashley Milnes, then dressed her body in hiking clothes, put her in her car and attempted to stage a crash by driving the vehicle down an embankment before setting it on fire.

The burned wreckage was discovered later that day on on Jan. 26, 2023, along Arrowhead Road, south of Highway 26, in The Blue Mountains.

Schwalm was arrested a week later, and pleaded guilty to second-degree murder last summer.

Crash scene Arrowhead Road, south of Highway 26, in The Blue Mountains. (CTV News/Mike Arsalides)

In November, the court heard victim impact statements, including from Milnes' father, who called Schwalm a pure narcissist, adding his daughter’s sudden and violent death at the hands of a former first responder devastated everyone who loved her.

The couple lived in Collingwood, Ont., with their two children, ages six and nine, at the time of Milnes' death.

schwalm Ashley Schwalm was found dead in a vehicle on Jan. 26, 2023. (Ashley Schwalm/LinkedIn)

The Crown previously told the court the former Brampton fire captain murdered his 40-year-old wife for financial reasons. “His choice was to scheme for days, at least, about how to kill the mother of his children and not get caught,” said Crown Attorney Lynne Saunders. “He resolved to do what would make him happy.”

The court also heard the couple’s marriage was on shaky ground, and that Schwalm had been researching alimony, how to erase iPhone history, and content that suggested he was looking for a way to start a fire without leaving evidence of its origin on his computer.

JAMES SCHWALM Court sketch of James Schwalm, of Collingwood, Ont. (Courtesy: John Mantha)

During his November sentencing hearing, Schwalm offered an apology and admitted being haunted by his actions. “This is where I need to be. Where I deserve to be because of my terrible awful actions.”

In a Barrie courtroom on Monday, Justice Fuerst said Schwalm had “spun a web of lies” trying to cover up the murder, adding he wasn’t the grieving husband he painted himself to be.

The Barrie judge called his behaviour an egregious breach of the trust of his partner and the mother of his children, stating, “Both children were aware that all was not right with their parents that night.”

Justice Fuerst agreed Schwalm had financial motive to end his wife’s life, and touched on his job as fire captain at the time of the murder, noting his actions were “completely appallingly at odds with the responsibility he assumed as a firefighter.”

Along with his life sentence, Schwalm was ordered to have no communication with his two children until they turn 18.

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With files from CTV’s Mike Arsalides