Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. High Court Says Former Special Constable In Burnaby Did The Crime, Must Serve The Time

The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2016 01:09 PM
    VANCOUVER — An RCMP special constable in Burnaby, B.C., has lost his appeal of a 14-month sentence for stealing drugs from the Mounties' exhibit locker.
     
    Gary Read was in charge of exhibits for the Burnaby detachment until 2011 when he was charged with the theft of about one kilogram of cocaine.
     
    He was convicted last February and handed a 14-month jail term, after provincial court Judge Paul Meyers rejected a request for a sentence that would have allowed Read to serve his time in the community.
     
    Read appealed, citing several errors by Meyers.
     
     
    But in a unanimous ruling, three B.C. Court of Appeal justices have sided with their lower-court colleague.
     
    The ruling says a conditional sentence would not have reflected deterrence or denunciation and the decision notes that even if the trial judge had made errors in principle, Read failed to show how the 14-month term was unfit.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Victoria Homeless Camp Faces Legal Showdown As B.C. Looks To Clean Up Site

    Victoria Homeless Camp Faces Legal Showdown As B.C. Looks To Clean Up Site
    Chris Parent says he was offered shelter space that includes a bed, bathroom and heat, but he's staying put in his tent on the grounds of Victoria's courthouse.

    Victoria Homeless Camp Faces Legal Showdown As B.C. Looks To Clean Up Site

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties
    A workplace investigation that followed the shooting of two Mounties in Alberta last year says the RCMP contravened Canada Labour Code health and safety rules.

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter
    oronto author Rosemary Sullivan is behind "Stalin's Daughter: The Extraordinary and Tumultuous Life of Svetlana Alliluyeva," which has won the $40,000 British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction and the $60,000 Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction.

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy
    The B.C. and Yukon Lifesaving Society awarded 10 people the Governor's Gold Award on Saturday.

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash
    A female passenger in the back seat of the car was pronounced dead at the scene.

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash

    Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit

    Finance Minister Joe Ceci has already announced that with no end in sight to bargain basement oil prices, the budget he unveils in early April will be about double the original deficit estimate of $5.4 billion.

    Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit