Close X
Thursday, December 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Crown counsel group raises safety concerns, Eby says no move for courthouse

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2024 01:21 PM
  • B.C. Crown counsel group raises safety concerns, Eby says no move for courthouse

Premier David Eby says the government is not currently considering the relocation of a provincial courthouse in downtown Vancouver, where the president of the British Columbia Crown Counsel Association says safety concerns are on the rise.

A statement from Adam Dalrymple says a recent attack on a prosecutor near the courthouse at 222 Main St. underscores the need for a "serious discussion" about whether it should be moved away from the Downtown Eastside.

Eby told an unrelated news conference that it's not a move the province is looking to make but he is "very concerned" about the assault last Friday.

The premier says he has spoken with B.C. Attorney General Niki Sharma and she would be reaching out to the Crown Counsel Association, in addition to her other work to ensure the safety of courts and the justice system.

Dalrymple's statement says the prosecutor was walking to work after parking her car when she was randomly attacked, sustaining injuries that sent her to hospital.

It says the attack reinforces growing concerns about public safety, and while the province provides security guards for people working in the courthouse, that's not the case for witnesses, victims or the general public coming to court.

"Without (public safety), how can you ensure that justice is safe and accessible for victims and witnesses who come to court and don't get security?" it says.

Police said the attack on the prosecutor was one of two assaults last Friday morning near Hastings and Columbia streets, about two blocks from the court.

A suspect was arrested and the assaults appear to have been random, police said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Lisa Batstone, B.C. mother who murdered daughter, 8, dies in prison

Lisa Batstone, B.C. mother who murdered daughter, 8, dies in prison
A British Columbia woman who was convicted of murdering her eight-year-old daughter has been found dead in prison. Correctional Service Canada says Lisa Batstone, who was serving an indeterminate life sentence for suffocating her sleeping child with a plastic bag in 2014, died in custody on Monday.

Lisa Batstone, B.C. mother who murdered daughter, 8, dies in prison

BC United MLA Elenore Sturko receives unwelcome Christmas gift from a local drug activist

BC United MLA Elenore Sturko receives unwelcome Christmas gift from a local drug activist
B-C United M-L-A Elenore Sturko says she and other lawmakers got an unwelcome Christmas gift this year from local drug activist Dana Larsen. Sturko says she was offended to receive a Christmas package containing psilocybin mushrooms and a coca leaf, which Larsen offers at local dispensaries. 

BC United MLA Elenore Sturko receives unwelcome Christmas gift from a local drug activist

Experts eye interest rate in 2024 as assessed property values stabilize in B.C.

Experts eye interest rate in 2024 as assessed property values stabilize in B.C.
The assessed value of a single-family home in Vancouver which reflected the market on July 1, 2023, rose four per cent to just above $2.2 million, while strata properties remained nearly unchanged at $807,000.  

Experts eye interest rate in 2024 as assessed property values stabilize in B.C.

Records for warmest December set or tied in Vancouver and other parts of B.C.

Records for warmest December set or tied in Vancouver and other parts of B.C.
Data from Environment Canada has confirmed what winter sport enthusiasts have known for a while — December was warm in British Columbia. Five communities in the province set or equalled temperature records for the month while the warm weather, combined with a lack of rain or snow, has done little to ease ongoing drought concerns.   

Records for warmest December set or tied in Vancouver and other parts of B.C.

Vancouver region closes out 2023 with higher home sales, average price of $1,168,700

Vancouver region closes out 2023 with higher home sales, average price of $1,168,700
The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says December home sales rose compared with a year earlier as the region closed out 2023 with balanced market conditions despite high borrowing costs. The board says 1,345 homes changed hands in December, a 3.2 per cent increase from the same month in 2022, but 36.4 per cent below the 10-year seasonal average.

Vancouver region closes out 2023 with higher home sales, average price of $1,168,700

TransLink launches new R-6 Scott Road RapidBus for Surrey

TransLink launches new R-6 Scott Road RapidBus for Surrey
TransLink says its new R-6 Scott Road RapidBus is now cruising the streets on what it calls the busiest bus corridor south of the Fraser.  TransLink says the R-6 is geared toward Surry and Delta residents and Kwantlen University students, who can expect to shave a few minutes off their trips between Scott Road station and the Newton bus exchange. 

TransLink launches new R-6 Scott Road RapidBus for Surrey