Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

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

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2015 08:11 PM
    VANCOUVER — 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.
     
    Jack Hittrich said the mother, identified only as J. P., has lost all confidence in the government as he petitioned the B.C. Supreme Court on Friday to put boundaries around the internal review.
     
    "This government, unfortunately, cannot be trusted and this process is fundamentally flawed," Hittrich told Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson. 
     
    The province appointed former civil servant Bob Plecas to lead the review in July, asking him to look into the policies and human resource concerns raised in a blistering B.C. Supreme Court ruling released just days earlier.
     
    Justice Paul Walker found that government social workers knowingly violated a court order banning the father from unsupervised visits.
     
    The workers labelled the mother as crazy and discounted tearful efforts to convince them that her children had been sexually abused by their father until she sued the province for refusing to investigate, court heard.
     
    Hittrich asked Hinkson on Friday to refine and narrow the review's terms of reference to ensure that Plecas would not be allowed to challenge the factual or legal conclusions made by Walker.
     
    Within its current, "unfettered" structure the review leaves room for intrusion into the judiciary, which could result in abuse of process, said Hittrich.
     
    He also alleged the Ministry of Children and Family Development had launched the review in "an attempt to spin."
     
    "This is not just a general review of child protection practices," he told court. "This is a very specific review which arose in the wake of public criticism."
     
    He said the mother would have believed the government was sincere if the review had been assigned to B.C.'s independent child advocate, Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond.
     
    The B.C. government is appealing Walker's ruling and the hearing is scheduled for five days in June next year.
     
    Government lawyer Leah Greathead made submissions to the judge that Hittrich's arguments were a "misapprehension" of what Plecas had been asked to do in the review.
     
    She said there's never been any intention to "retry" the case.
     
    "The ministry has an obligation not just to the petitioner and her children but to many children in British Columbia," she said. "And for good public policy reasons, has chosen to see what happened here."
     
    The mother previously filed a complaint with B.C.'s privacy commissioner, who ruled the ministry didn't break any rules when it shared the family's files with employees involved in the review.
     
    Plecas was supposed to submit his report by Oct. 13, but his work has been delayed by the mother's complaints to the commissioner and the court.
     
    Hinkson has reserved his decision.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Aboriginal Agency Says B.C. Government Shifting Blame In Foster Teen's Death

    Aboriginal Agency Says B.C. Government Shifting Blame In Foster Teen's Death
    Premier Christy Clark has accused the Fraser Valley Aboriginal Children and Family Services Society of making a "real mistake" for not telling the Children's Ministry that 18-year-old Alex Gervais was staying alone in a hotel.

    Aboriginal Agency Says B.C. Government Shifting Blame In Foster Teen's Death

    Four Pedestrians Injured, Two Seriously, After Being Struck By Montreal Taxi

    Four Pedestrians Injured, Two Seriously, After Being Struck By Montreal Taxi
    Montreal police spokesman Francois Collard says the two are a 45-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman.

    Four Pedestrians Injured, Two Seriously, After Being Struck By Montreal Taxi

    Shooting Of Ontario Man At Vancouver Mall Believed To Be Linked To Gangs: Police

    Shooting Of Ontario Man At Vancouver Mall Believed To Be Linked To Gangs: Police
    Investigators say 30-year-old Duy Ly Nguyen of Ontario has been identified as the man who was shot while sitting in a vehicle on Sunday.

    Shooting Of Ontario Man At Vancouver Mall Believed To Be Linked To Gangs: Police

    Metro Vancouver Serial Child Rapist Ibata Hexamer Disputes Computer Evidence In Sentencing Hearing

    Metro Vancouver Serial Child Rapist Ibata Hexamer Disputes Computer Evidence In Sentencing Hearing
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice James Williams said the stakes are high for Ibata Hexamer and has called a hearing next week to determine the admissibility of the computer evidence in the sentencing process.

    Metro Vancouver Serial Child Rapist Ibata Hexamer Disputes Computer Evidence In Sentencing Hearing

    New Democrats Repeatedly Demand The Resignation Of B.C. Children's Minister

    The death of an 18-year-old male in government care is a part of a pattern of tragedies plaguing British Columbia's Ministry of Children and Families, say Opposition New Democrats who made repeated calls Monday for the minister to resign. 

    New Democrats Repeatedly Demand The Resignation Of B.C. Children's Minister

    Tractors, Cows On Ottawa Streets As Farmers Express Trade Talk Fears

    Tractors, Cows On Ottawa Streets As Farmers Express Trade Talk Fears
    Dozens of tractors are clogging Wellington Street in front of the Parliament Buildings.

    Tractors, Cows On Ottawa Streets As Farmers Express Trade Talk Fears