Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Judge Asks Lawyers To Prove Fraudster Doesn't Deserve Prison Time

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2015 11:51 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A B.C. Supreme Court justice has asked Crown and defence lawyers to prove that an admitted fraudster who bilked a senior out of more than $20,000 shouldn't be sent to prison.
     
    Darren Sidwell, 44, has pleaded guilty to fraud.
     
    Crown counsel Sarah Firestone said the episode began in the fall of 2011, when the victim who resides in the Interior village of Clinton replied to an ad posted on a community billboard offering services for hire.
     
    Sidwell completed a small job by removing limbs from a tree, but he told the woman she had a drainage problem on her property.
     
    "It was entirely a fiction," Firestone said in court on Tuesday.
     
    Sidwell told the woman he needed money to help a cousin whose vehicle had broken down, to pay arrears on an orthotic foot brace for one of his children and to help his daughter, who he said was ill in B.C. Children’s Hospital, suffering a heart condition.
     
    "While she does have a heart condition, she’s never been hospitalized," Firestone said.
     
    Two cheques were also made out to accomplices who were never arrested.
     
    The RCMP began investigating after a credit-union employee noticed the series of unusual withdrawals.
     
    Firestone argued for a 12-month conditional sentence, consisting of house arrest and a restitution order that Sidwell repay the 76-year-old pensioner the money he defrauded her.
     
    He has no assets.
     
    Sidwell told a probation officer he is a "master manipulator."
     
    Defence lawyer Chris Thompson argued for a six-month conditional sentence with a lighter curfew condition, arguing Sidwell is now rehabilitated.
     
    But Justice Terrence Schultes said he needs to be convinced Sidwell shouldn't serve more than two years of federal time.
     
    Sidwell has past convictions for possession of stolen property and theft.
     
    "I need to start at step one and hear why this doesn't call for incarceration," Schultes said.
     
    Thompson said Sidwell underwent extensive rehabilitation and counselling at a Prince George facility for 17 months.
     
    He said his client suffered drug addiction and was abandoned by his family.
     
    "His family has looked down on him as a lost cause," Thompson said, adding they now support him after his change.
     
    Near the end of the sentencing hearing, a woman in the gallery who identified herself as Sidwell’s ex-wife blurted out that Sidwell is conning the legal system.
     
    "I’ve heard this story a hundred times," she said.
     
    "He’s owed me money for a long time.
     
    "Where’s his family today that’s standing up for him?"
     
    Lawyers are scheduled to return to court on Friday.
     
    Schultes has asked them to present stronger legal arguments why Sidwell does not deserve a prison sentence.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    From A Mountain Top To Centre Block: How Harper Made The Case For War

    From A Mountain Top To Centre Block: How Harper Made The Case For War
    OTTAWA — Twice in six months, Prime Minister Stephen Harper put a motion before the House of Commons to commit Canada to war with the militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

    From A Mountain Top To Centre Block: How Harper Made The Case For War

    Making Sense Of The Duffy Trial: A Primer On The Four Principal Chapters

    Making Sense Of The Duffy Trial: A Primer On The Four Principal Chapters
    OTTAWA — When the trial for Mike Duffy gets underway Tuesday, Crown prosecutors will lay out their case against the suspended senator in four key areas. Here's a look at the issues behind the charges against him.

    Making Sense Of The Duffy Trial: A Primer On The Four Principal Chapters

    Cost Of Iraq And Nato Reassurance Missions 'Classified' In Coming Budget: DND

    Cost Of Iraq And Nato Reassurance Missions 'Classified' In Coming Budget: DND
    OTTAWA — Parliament may have approved a year-long extension to the country's combat mission in Iraq and Syria, but the Harper government is once again refusing to say how much it will cost taxpayers.

    Cost Of Iraq And Nato Reassurance Missions 'Classified' In Coming Budget: DND

    Museum Of History Opens Exhibit Chronicling Terry Fox's Marathon Of Hope

    Museum Of History Opens Exhibit Chronicling Terry Fox's Marathon Of Hope
    GATINEAU, Que. — An exhibit of artifacts from Terry Fox's epic Marathon of Hope is opening this week at the Canadian Museum of History.

    Museum Of History Opens Exhibit Chronicling Terry Fox's Marathon Of Hope

    Duffy Trial Promises Crash Course In Controversial Senate Expense, Housing Rules

    Duffy Trial Promises Crash Course In Controversial Senate Expense, Housing Rules
    OTTAWA — When lawyers arrive at the Ottawa courthouse Tuesday for the long-awaited start of the Mike Duffy trial, they'll be armed with the equivalent of advanced degrees in the rules governing Senate expenses.

    Duffy Trial Promises Crash Course In Controversial Senate Expense, Housing Rules

    Quebec To Continue To Support Raif Badawi Despite Saudi Ambassador's Criticism

    Quebec To Continue To Support Raif Badawi Despite Saudi Ambassador's Criticism
    MONTREAL — Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Canada is telling Quebec politicians his government won't accept meddling in its internal affairs in response to the case of a jailed blogger.

    Quebec To Continue To Support Raif Badawi Despite Saudi Ambassador's Criticism