Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Judge Anne Wallace Who Died After Full Day At Work Remembered As 'Bright Spark'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Oct, 2015 12:24 PM
    KELOWNA, B.C. — Flags were lowered Friday outside the law courts in Kelowna, B.C., to honour a judge who is being remembered for her dedication to volunteering.
     
    Anne Wallace, who presided at provincial court trials in the city for 10 years, died Thursday in hospital. She was 61.
     
    Friends said she sufferered a brain hemorrhage Monday night after a full day at work and was put on life support.
     
    “It was sudden, unpreventable, untreatable and unexpected,” said Wallace’s colleague, Judge Jane Cartwright.
     
    “We’re heartbroken and devastated. She really was the heart and soul of our chambers. She was a bright spark and a ball of energy, enthusiasm and generosity.”
     
    Wallace was organizing a Christmas party and looking forward to working part time next year. She and her husband Russ Impett planned to celebrate their 30th anniversary in Paris.
     
    Her family, including her three sisters and a brother, were at her side in hospital Thursday.
     
    They agreed to donate her organs, Cartwright said, adding that will save the lives of at least four people.
     
    “They were asked if they need time to think about it and everyone said ‘No, it’s exactly what she would have wanted.’ It’s very Anne to want to benefit other people."
     
    Wallace was a Crown prosecutor and a Queen’s counsel in Victoria before she was appointed a provincial court judge in Kelowna.
     
    At her swearing-in ceremony in November 2005, then-chief judge Hugh Stansfield described her as “diligent, thorough, fair and dedicated.”
     
    Her father George Scott Wallace led the B.C. Conservative Party in the 1970s. Her family believed in public service, and she volunteered for many charities.
     
    Wallace planned to travel and volunteer more after she started working less, Cartwright said.
     
    “She’d volunteer to work for the most difficult of assignments. She would be the first to volunteer, for everything.”
     
    Wallace leaves behind her husband and two daughters, who are in their 20s. (Kelowna Daily Courier)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Investigators Believe Drywall Hammer May Have Been Used In Richard Oland Murder

    Investigators Believe Drywall Hammer May Have Been Used In Richard Oland Murder
    The lead investigator into the murder of Richard Oland says police suspect a drywall hammer or similar instrument was used to kill the Saint John businessman.

    Investigators Believe Drywall Hammer May Have Been Used In Richard Oland Murder

    5 Albertans Guilty Of Killing, Leaving 4 Trophy Bighorn Rams To Spoil

    5 Albertans Guilty Of Killing, Leaving 4 Trophy Bighorn Rams To Spoil
    HINTON, Alta. — Five Alberta men have been found guilty of illegally hunting, killing and leaving four trophy bighorn rams to spoil.

    5 Albertans Guilty Of Killing, Leaving 4 Trophy Bighorn Rams To Spoil

    B.C. Mom Asks Court To Change Terms Of Government-Led Review Of Child Abuse Case

    A judge should fix a "one-sided, less-than-objective" government review into the case of British Columbia social workers who granted unsupervised visits to a father who had sexually abused his four children, says a lawyer for their mother.

    B.C. Mom Asks Court To Change Terms Of Government-Led Review Of Child Abuse Case

    Premier Christy Clark Delivers Order To Save Emails After Blistering Privacy Report

    British Columbia Premier Christy Clark ordered her cabinet ministers and all political staff Friday to save their emails after a stinging report criticized the government's access to information practices.

    Premier Christy Clark Delivers Order To Save Emails After Blistering Privacy Report

    Liberals Spent More Than $40 Million But Nowhere Near Max, Or Conservatives, To Win Election

    Liberal national director Jeremy Broadhurst estimates that the final bill will tally a little more than $40 million.

    Liberals Spent More Than $40 Million But Nowhere Near Max, Or Conservatives, To Win Election

    Germany Welcomes Justin Trudeau Participation On Climate Change, Diplomacy

    Germany Welcomes Justin Trudeau Participation On Climate Change, Diplomacy
    OTTAWA — Germany hopes that the advent of a Trudeau Liberal government means Canada will play a more positive role at the upcoming Paris climate summit.

    Germany Welcomes Justin Trudeau Participation On Climate Change, Diplomacy