Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Acadia University In Nova Scotia Investigates Sexual Assault Allegation

The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2018 12:53 PM
  • Acadia University In Nova Scotia Investigates Sexual Assault Allegation
HALIFAX — A male Acadia University student accused of sexually assaulting a female student has failed in his bid to stop the school's Equity Office from investigating the allegation.
 
 
In a decision released Thursday, a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge dismissed the male student's application for an injunction.
 
 
The court's decision, which only refers to "Student X" and "Student Y," says the female student was a minor when she complained to the university's security service that she had been sexually assaulted by a male student at his off-campus residence on Nov. 19, 2016.
 
 
The complaint was handed to Acadia's judicial board, which on March 6, 2017, found the male student guilty of sexual assault and recommended he be dismissed from the university, banned from the Wolfville, N.S., campus, and prohibited from contacting the complainant.
 
 
However, the male student filed an appeal with the university's disciplinary appeals committee. It rendered a not guilty verdict on May 8, 2017, issuing a three-line statement outlining its reasons.
 
 
Less than a month later, the female student filed a complaint of sexual harassment with the university's Equity Office, under its discrimination and harassment policy.
 
 
When the male student was told of the complaint process, his lawyer responded that his client would not be taking part because the case had already been dealt with by another administrative quasi-judicial process.
 
 
The lawyer then sought an injunction to stop the investigation, but the Nova Scotia Supreme Court dismissed that application in its ruling released Thursday.
 
 
A spokeswoman for the RCMP says the Mounties could be investigating this case as a criminal matter, but she could not confirm that was happening because there isn't enough detail provided in the court ruling.

MORE National ARTICLES

Richmond RCMP Investigating ‘Suspicious' Death Of Man Pulled From Fraser River

Richmond RCMP Investigating ‘Suspicious' Death Of Man Pulled From Fraser River
Mounties in Richmond, B.C., are investigating the suspicious death of a man whose body was pulled from the water near Steveston Harbour this weekend.

Richmond RCMP Investigating ‘Suspicious' Death Of Man Pulled From Fraser River

Missing 25-Yr-Old Vancouver Man Saeid Mirzaei Katik Lahijani Possibly Hiking Near Grouse Mountain

Missing 25-Yr-Old Vancouver Man Saeid Mirzaei Katik Lahijani Possibly Hiking Near Grouse Mountain
The Vancouver Police are requesting the public’s assistance in locating missing 25-year-old Saeid Mirzaei Katik Lahijani who was last in contact with family shortly after 5pm yesterday.

Missing 25-Yr-Old Vancouver Man Saeid Mirzaei Katik Lahijani Possibly Hiking Near Grouse Mountain

ICBC Spends $800,000 In Damage Claims For Ferrari That Crashed Into Pole

ICBC Spends $800,000 In Damage Claims For Ferrari That Crashed Into Pole
According to documents filed in B.C. Supreme Court, the plaintiff accidentally drove the 1990 Ferrari F40 into a utility pole on Sept. 9, 2012, leaving it badly damaged.

ICBC Spends $800,000 In Damage Claims For Ferrari That Crashed Into Pole

‘It's Really Frustrating:' Sikh Canadians Dismayed By Extremism Allegations

‘It's Really Frustrating:' Sikh Canadians Dismayed By Extremism Allegations
I almost feel like this obsession with Sikhs shows that India is almost threatened by Sikhs in the diaspora

‘It's Really Frustrating:' Sikh Canadians Dismayed By Extremism Allegations

Vancouver Police Looking For Shawana Chaudhary And Son After Alleged Parental Abduction

Vancouver Police Looking For Shawana Chaudhary And Son After Alleged Parental Abduction
Shawana Chaudhary May Be Traveling With Her Son, Emerson Cusworth, And Her Six-year-old Daughter.

Vancouver Police Looking For Shawana Chaudhary And Son After Alleged Parental Abduction

Karina Gould Becomes First Federal Cabinet Minister To Give Birth

Karina Gould Becomes First Federal Cabinet Minister To Give Birth
OTTAWA — Democratic Institutions Minister Karina Gould has made history — twice over — with the birth of a baby boy this week. She's the first woman to give birth while holding a federal cabinet post.

Karina Gould Becomes First Federal Cabinet Minister To Give Birth