The transfer of a woman convicted in a 2009 rape and murder will be reviewed.
It was released Tuesday, that Terri-Lynne McClincic, convicted of first-degree murder in the death of eight-year-old Tori Stafford in 2010, was moved from prison to a healing lodge in Saskatchewan.
On Wednesday, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale asked correctional officials to review the transfer of McClincic who in 2010, was sentenced to life without parole for 25 years.
In the House of Commons, the Conservatives called the decision "despicable" and called on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to reverse the transfer.
Trudeau accused Opposition Leader Andrew Scheer of playing politics with a tragic situation, noting McClintic was classified as a medium security inmate in 2014 and that hasn't.
Stafford's grandmother says Correctional Service Canada notified her family of McClintic's move.
The lodge is run by Correctional Service Canada and is for offenders that require a minimum to medium security level.
Stafford's father Rodney, has expressed his frustration at the move, saying on Facebook that McClintic gets her life back in multiple ways but his family will never see Tori again — he has planned a peaceful protest at Parliament Hill in Ottawa for November 2nd.
— with files from The Canadian Press