Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Judge Says Pickton Sex Assault Victim Should Have Settled For $50,000

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Aug, 2015 11:27 AM
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia woman who was sexually assaulted by the brother of serial killer Robert Pickton will not get any payment for her costs at a trial.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice George Macintosh says the woman should have accepted David Pickton's $50,000 settlement offer before the civil trial, which ended in June.
     
    A jury awarded $45,000 to the woman, who testified that Pickton felt her genitals through her jeans and threatened rape, while the man testified he only slapped her on the buttocks.
     
    Macintosh has now ruled that the woman will only be awarded costs incurred in the leadup to the trial, and the amount has yet to be determined.
     
    He says the woman's memory was ravaged by her difficult life and that the sexual assault on her by Pickton more than two decades ago was a small event among her many miseries.
     
    Pickton was convicted in 1992 for the sexual assault in a trailer on a construction site and fined $1,000 at the time.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada's Doctors Want Parents To Give Schools Proof Of Child's Immunization

    Canada's Doctors Want Parents To Give Schools Proof Of Child's Immunization
    The Canadian Medical Association says school officials should be able to ask parents for proof that their children have been vaccinated.

    Canada's Doctors Want Parents To Give Schools Proof Of Child's Immunization

    Alberta Drivers Charged $20 'Toll' After Deadly Crash Forces Detour Through First Nation

    Alberta Drivers Charged $20 'Toll' After Deadly Crash Forces Detour Through First Nation
    Tribal administrator Christensen says he has heard that some members pocketed tolls of $10 or $20, although motorists weren't forced to pay and could have taken the proper detour.

    Alberta Drivers Charged $20 'Toll' After Deadly Crash Forces Detour Through First Nation

    Revenues Could Be Down More Than Previous Government Predicted: Alberta Premier

    Revenues Could Be Down More Than Previous Government Predicted: Alberta Premier
    Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says continued oil-price volatility could be affecting the province's bottom line even more than the former Tory government predicted.

    Revenues Could Be Down More Than Previous Government Predicted: Alberta Premier

    Police Search For Four Kids Allegedly Abducted By Kurdish Canadian Dad And Taken To Middle East

    Police Search For Four Kids Allegedly Abducted By Kurdish Canadian Dad And Taken To Middle East
    Alison Azer says in an online fundraising campaign that her ex-husband, Dr. Saren Azer, is a Kurdish Canadian who took their kids to the Middle East.

    Police Search For Four Kids Allegedly Abducted By Kurdish Canadian Dad And Taken To Middle East

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago
    Elery Long, 70, has a pension and can afford reasonable housing, the Parole Board of Canada said in a recent decision.

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case
    LOWER TRURO, N.S. — Police are continuing their search of a property near Truro, N.S., as they investigate the murder of a young physics student in Halifax.

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case