Frank P. Miller

Frank P. Miller (1912–Feb 8, 2000)[1][2] was a major figure in criminal-justice reform in Canada who helped create the modern parole system.

[5] Miller left that position in 1952 to become assistant director of the Department of Justice’s Remission Service (the forerunner of the Parole Board of Canada).

Miller was appointed to the board, along with Edouard Dion, J. Alex Edmison and chair T. George Street.

[3] That year, he was appointed the Canadian co-ordinator to the Fifth United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders.

[1] Throughout his career Miller volunteered with the Canadian Criminal Justice Association, serving as the head of its subcommittee on records, and as its president from 1969 to 1971.