Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Aboriginal Rights Not Violated By Some Prison Tests Says Federal Court Of Appeal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Aug, 2016 01:34 PM
    VANCOUVER — A panel of the Federal Court of Appeal has unanimously overturned a lower court ruling that found the charter rights of aboriginal inmates were violated by certain psychological tests.
     
    The tests, designed to assess personality disorders and the risk of repeat offences, were challenged by British Columbia inmate Jeffrey Ewert.
     
    He argued the tests were culturally biased and adversely affected his security clearance and eligibility for parole or day passes.
     
    The Federal Court agreed and ordered corrections officials to stop using the assessments, at least until their reliability on adult aboriginal offenders had been demonstrated.
     
    But in a ruling released this week in Ottawa, Justice Eleanor Dawson says the Federal Court judge was wrong to accept that the "assessment tools generate results that are inaccurate or unreliable in a material way."
     
    She finds Ewert's charter argument fails because he could not offer the required level of proof that the tests provide false results or conclusions when administered to aboriginals.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver-Area Train Derails, Believed To Be On Tracks Servicing Grain Terminal

    Vancouver-Area Train Derails, Believed To Be On Tracks Servicing Grain Terminal
    Burnaby Fire Chief Joe Robertson says a train was running on a private spur line that services a grain terminal on the south shore of the Burrard Inlet when it jumped the tracks.

    Vancouver-Area Train Derails, Believed To Be On Tracks Servicing Grain Terminal

    Fires Set, Windows Smashed In Riot At Youth Jail In Burnaby, B.C.: Guards' Union

    Fires Set, Windows Smashed In Riot At Youth Jail In Burnaby, B.C.: Guards' Union
    BURNABY, B.C. — Officials say a riot at a young offenders jail in Burnaby, B.C., has caused extensive damage.

    Fires Set, Windows Smashed In Riot At Youth Jail In Burnaby, B.C.: Guards' Union

    Feeling Let Down By Universities, Survivors Meet To Fight Campus Sex Assaults

    Feeling Let Down By Universities, Survivors Meet To Fight Campus Sex Assaults
    VANCOUVER — Mandi Gray has lost count of the messages she's received from women who say their universities failed them after they were sexually assaulted.

    Feeling Let Down By Universities, Survivors Meet To Fight Campus Sex Assaults

    Pilots Held For Suspected Drinking Before Glasgow To Toronto Flight

    Pilots Held For Suspected Drinking Before Glasgow To Toronto Flight
    Two television personalities whose flight from Scotland to Toronto was postponed by a day after both pilots were arrested on suspicion of drunkenness said they were frustrated by the delay but relieved that their safety wasn't jeopardized.

    Pilots Held For Suspected Drinking Before Glasgow To Toronto Flight

    Calgary Man, 21, Identified After Fatal Fall In B.C. National Park

    Calgary Man, 21, Identified After Fatal Fall In B.C. National Park
    FIELD, B.C. — The coroner's service in British Columbia has identified a 21-year-old Calgary man who died after a fall in Yoho National Park.

    Calgary Man, 21, Identified After Fatal Fall In B.C. National Park

    New Brunswick Couple Arrives At Emergency Room, Allegedly Told To Call 911

    New Brunswick Couple Arrives At Emergency Room, Allegedly Told To Call 911
    Candy Price of Riverview, N.B., says she drove her husband, Scott Macdonald, to the Moncton Hospital on July 13 with crippling back pain.

    New Brunswick Couple Arrives At Emergency Room, Allegedly Told To Call 911