Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. launches hiring drive for Crown prosecutors

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jan, 2023 03:55 PM
  • B.C. launches hiring drive for Crown prosecutors

VICTORIA - The British Columbia Prosecution Service has launched a recruitment drive for Crown lawyers and other staff, part of a series of recent measures to address repeat violent offending.

A statement from the service says it's aiming to hire up to 40 Crown counsel this year, some to fill vacancies created by the dedication of prosecutors to repeat violent offender response teams.

Those teams are part of the province's safer communities action plan launched by Premier David Eby soon after he was sworn in last November.

At the time, Eby said the plan has two key tracks: enforcement, recognizing "zero tolerance" for violence in communities, and intervention, or preventing crime before it happens through services that address root causes.

Officials have said the response teams will consist of police, prosecutors and probation officers who will focus on repeat offenders, while the province also plans to add 12 mental health response teams, some Indigenous-led.

The job posting for Crown counsel to join the prosecution service shows openings in more than 20 communities from Metro Vancouver to Dawson Creek in northeastern B.C., with the potential for hiring in additional locations.

The service says it's looking for lawyers with at least six years of trial experience and it's strongly encouraging applications from candidates across Canada.

The Opposition Liberals have been critical of what they call the government's "catch-and-release" policy on repeat violent offenders, citing incidents of people being arrested for alleged violent attacks and being released on bail soon after.

Eby has said the provincial action plan is needed in part because federal changes to the bail system have made it more difficult to hold people who commit repeat, violent offences in custody until they've stood trial.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. premier cites 'multi-faceted' crime approach

B.C. premier cites 'multi-faceted' crime approach
B.C. Premier John Horgan says the New Democrat government's crime-fighting agenda involves more than increasing arrests of alleged violent offenders. Horgan says he agrees with Attorney General Murray Rankin who told the legislature on Tuesday that a focus on more arrests of prolific offenders to curb crime would be "futile."  

B.C. premier cites 'multi-faceted' crime approach

Gas prices creep higher as OPEC Plus cuts output

Gas prices creep higher as OPEC Plus cuts output
Gasoline prices in Canada continue to creep higher ahead of the Thanksgiving long weekend. And while the price of crude oil slumped in September, with the international benchmark Brent sagging as low as US$84 in recent days after spending most of the summer months over $100 per barrel, it jumped on Wednesday after the OPEC Plus alliance of oil-exporting countries decided to sharply cut production.

Gas prices creep higher as OPEC Plus cuts output

Federal government introduces diabetes framework

Federal government introduces diabetes framework
Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos and the federal government have tabled a new and long-awaited plan in the House of Commons to improve access to diabetes treatment and prevention in Canada. Liberal MP Sonia Sidhu called for the framework as part of a private member's bill that became law in 2021.

Federal government introduces diabetes framework

Vancouver police probe Komagata Maru vandalism

Vancouver police probe Komagata Maru vandalism
The VPD says it launched an investigation Tuesday after being alerted by a social media post that the glass covering the memorial in Coal Harbour had been shattered. Const. Jason Doucette says officers are looking into any links to what he called a "similar crime" in which glass sections of the Olympic Cauldron less than 200 metres away were smashed on Saturday morning.

Vancouver police probe Komagata Maru vandalism

Bear attacks family, two gravely hurt: B.C. RCMP

Bear attacks family, two gravely hurt: B.C. RCMP
A statement posted to social media by the B.C. Conservation Officer Service says the family of four turned and ran when the bear charged them Monday evening. The service says the bear chased them and attacked one woman, while another woman and a teenage boy were injured trying to help her.  

Bear attacks family, two gravely hurt: B.C. RCMP

Man pleads guilty to Langley triple homicide

Man pleads guilty to Langley triple homicide
The homicide team says in a statement that Kia Ebrahimian pleaded guilty to three counts of second-degree murder in B.C. Supreme Court on Monday. Police were called to a Langley house fire on June 13, 2020, and found the bodies of the man's mother Tatiana Bazyar, his brother Befrin Ebrahimian and Francesco Zangrilli.  

Man pleads guilty to Langley triple homicide