Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Ministry Facing Lawsuit To Review Toddler Isabella Wiens' Death In Burnaby Foster Home

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2015 01:35 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's children's ministry will review the case of a toddler whose death in foster care prompted a high-profile lawsuit against the province.
     
    A second coroner's report has also been released in the death of 21-month-old Isabella Wiens, whose badly bruised and fractured body was found in her Burnaby, B.C., foster home in March 2013. 
     
    Mother Sara-Jane Wiens launched a lawsuit against the Ministry of Children and Family Development earlier this year, alleging the government failed to properly supervise her daughter or adequately consider returning her home.
     
    Minister Stephanie Cadieux wrote in a letter to member of the legislature Doug Donaldson late last month that while the death didn't initially qualify for a case review, new information has emerged.
     
    Barbara McLintock of the B.C. Coroners Service says the new report is meant to answer some of Wiens' questions and is based on the initial investigation conducted after Isabella's death.
     
    The report maintains the child's injuries could have been accidental or caused by trauma, but also reveals new details including that the toddler did not visit a doctor in the six months before her death.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three Buckled Girders On Edmonton Bridge To Be Removed For Inspection

    Three Buckled Girders On Edmonton Bridge To Be Removed For Inspection
    EDMONTON — Three large steel girders that buckled on a key bridge under construction in Edmonton last month are being removed for repair or replacement.

    Three Buckled Girders On Edmonton Bridge To Be Removed For Inspection

    Supreme Court To Hear Case Over Well Said To Be Contaminated By Fracking

    Supreme Court To Hear Case Over Well Said To Be Contaminated By Fracking
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will decide whether an Alberta woman can sue the province's energy regulator over her claim that hydraulic fracturing has so badly contaminated her well that the water can be set on fire.

    Supreme Court To Hear Case Over Well Said To Be Contaminated By Fracking

    Sexualized Culture Of The Military Creates A Hostile 'Culture Of Misogyny'

    Sexualized Culture Of The Military Creates A Hostile 'Culture Of Misogyny'
    OTTAWA — Never mind the prospect of enemies on the battlefield — Canadian Forces soldiers face a hostile environment even among their own ranks, says a long-awaited review into sexual misconduct in the country's military.

    Sexualized Culture Of The Military Creates A Hostile 'Culture Of Misogyny'

    Boy, 11, Detained For Shopping Without A Grown-Up At Lego Store In Calgary

    Boy, 11, Detained For Shopping Without A Grown-Up At Lego Store In Calgary
    Doug Dunlop says his boy Tadhg (TYGH) went to the store Sunday to spend his own money, as he has done dozens of times before.

    Boy, 11, Detained For Shopping Without A Grown-Up At Lego Store In Calgary

    Police Search For Evidence, Suspects After 29-Year-Old Victoria Man Shot

    Officers say the 29-year-old arrived at Royal Jubilee Hospital with a non-life threatening gunshot wound at about 12:30 a.m. Thursday.

    Police Search For Evidence, Suspects After 29-Year-Old Victoria Man Shot

    B.C. Appeal Court To Rule On Long-Standing Dispute Between Teachers And Province

    B.C. Appeal Court To Rule On Long-Standing Dispute Between Teachers And Province
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's highest court is set to release its ruling on a long-standing dispute between the province and teachers, who waged a lengthy strike last summer.

    B.C. Appeal Court To Rule On Long-Standing Dispute Between Teachers And Province