Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alleged Victims Sue Man Awarded Millions After Acquittal In Sex-Assault Case

The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2017 11:48 AM
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man who spent 27 years wrongfully imprisoned for sexual assault is being sued by five alleged victims who say he doesn't deserve the millions of dollars he was awarded as compensation.
     
    The five unnamed women filed a lawsuit in B.C. Supreme Court on Friday alleging that Ivan Henry broke into their homes in the 1980s and sexually assaulted them.
     
    He was convicted in 1983 on 10 counts of sexual assault but those convictions were overturned seven years ago.
     
    The civil lawsuit alleges that in most of the five cases Henry told the women he was looking for someone who had ripped him off, he asked about a boyfriend and then sexually assaulted them.
     
    "The conduct of the defendant was calculated to inflict emotional suffering and psychological damage upon the plaintiffs," the document says.
     
    The allegations have not been proven in court and Henry has not filed a statement of defence with the court.
     
    Marilyn Sandford, Henry's lawyer, said it is sad her client is being asked to defend himself again, adding the evidence has not changed and Henry is confident the court will side with him again.
     
    "The fact that Mr. Ivan Henry is innocent can't be changed," she said in an interview. "That's the reality. We appreciate it may be difficult for some to accept."
     
     
    Sandford said Henry wouldn't be available for an interview.
     
    "He understands not everybody sees things the same way, particularly women who have been through such a traumatic incident and have believed for so many decades that he is the perpetrator," Sandford said. "Those are difficult ideas to dislodge from them, and he understands that."
     
    Henry's conviction was overturned in the B.C. Court of Appeal in 2010 because of flaws the judge found in both the trial and the police investigation, including a lineup photo that showed plain-clothed officers holding Henry in a headlock.
     
    Henry, who is now in his 70s, sued and was awarded $8 million in damages from the provincial government in 2016. He was also awarded an undisclosed amount of compensation from the City of Vancouver and the federal government.
     
    Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson of the B.C. Supreme Court said in the settlement decision that Henry would likely have been acquitted during his 1983 trial had Crown prosecutors disclosed the evidence to him. He said the Crown's decision to withhold information from Henry, who acted as his own lawyer, demonstrated a "shocking disregard" for his rights and "seriously infringed" on his right to a fair trial.
     
    The notice of civil claim filed by the five women seeks damages and asks that Henry be denied the money he was awarded for wrongful imprisonment.
     
    Scott Stanley, who represents the five women, said the civil lawsuit is intended to give his clients a voice.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. woman files lawsuit against Canadian government over terrorist label

    A B.C. Supreme Court lawsuit accuses the federal government of maliciously supplying false information about terrorist-related activity to the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation in order to secure lucrative military contracts for Canada's defence industry.

    B.C. woman files lawsuit against Canadian government over terrorist label

    'Dirty Chinese Restaurant' game denounced as racist by U.S., Ont. politicians

    'Dirty Chinese Restaurant' game denounced as racist by U.S., Ont. politicians
    A Toronto-area company's upcoming video game called "Dirty Chinese Restaurant" is being denounced as racist, but the business says its product is meant as satire.

    'Dirty Chinese Restaurant' game denounced as racist by U.S., Ont. politicians

    B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections

    B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections
    Municipalities in British Columbia want the provincial government to restrict the role of money in local politics in time for next year's elections.

    B.C. municipalities want campaign finance reform ahead of 2018 local elections

    Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy

    Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy
    The chair of News Media Canada says the country's struggling newspaper industry is "on its own" thanks to a federal cultural strategy that all but snubs so-called legacy media.

    Stop the presses? Newspapers snubbed in Liberal government's cultural policy

    Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos

    Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos
    An independent expert has been appointed by the B.C. government to conduct a review of the province's policies and practices to prevent money laundering in the gambling industry.

    Expert on money laundering appointed to review practices in B.C. casinos

    Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home

    Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home
    Vancouver police say they are investigating a double homicide after the bodies of a man and a woman in their 60s were found in a home on Wednesday.

    Police probe double homicide after couple found dead in south Vancouver home