Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Brandie Bloor, B.C. Woman Who Defrauded Man For Breast Implants Sentenced For Stealing Stones

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Aug, 2015 01:10 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A woman who pleaded guilty to defrauding an elderly man into paying for breast implants and a tummy tuck has received another jail sentence — for stealing precious stones.
     
    Brandie Bloor, 39, has now pleaded guilty to pocketing the stones worth $2,500.
     
    Provincial court Judge Stephen Harrison sentenced Bloor to 90 days behind bars, a one-year probation term and barred her from being within 30 metres of Sahali Mall.
     
    Bloor will also have to repay a store $1,000 — the approximate wholesale value of the stones.
     
    She appeared in court Thursday via video from jail, where she is already serving a nine-month sentence for stealing an elderly man's identity to pay for cosmetic surgery last year.
     
    Crown lawyer Chris Balison said Bloor walked into a store on Nov. 22, 2014 and waited for an 82-year-old clerk to become distracted with another customer.
     
    Balison said Bloor stole 10 precious stones and took off.
     
    The clerk called the mall maintenance worker to help find the thief.
     
    “He followed her to a bathroom, but (Bloor) eventually left the mall.”
     
    Police identified her using video surveillance. The stones were not recovered.
     
    Bloor is also on the hook for $17,000 — the amount she fraudulently obtained to pay for the implants and tummy tuck.
     
    In that case, Crown lawyer Katie Bouchard called the offence "a crime of vanity and greed."
     
    She said an 83-year-old man received a letter from a loan company saying he was behind on payments after borrowing $15,000 for cosmetic surgeries — a loan he supposedly cosigned with Bloor.
     
    Court heard the man was surprised and confused when he received the letter listing him as Bloor's grandfather, but he'd never heard of her.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Steven Sabados Not Returning To 'Steven And Chris' After Death Of Chris Hyndman

    Steven Sabados Not Returning To 'Steven And Chris' After Death Of Chris Hyndman
    TORONTO — Steven Sabados won't be returning to the CBC-TV show "Steven and Chris" after the death of his husband/co-host Chris Hyndman.

    Steven Sabados Not Returning To 'Steven And Chris' After Death Of Chris Hyndman

    B.C. Forests Minister Looking For Video To Help Solve Wildfire's Cause

    B.C. Forests Minister Looking For Video To Help Solve Wildfire's Cause
    British Columbia Forests Minister Steve Thomson says officials are looking for a video that apparently shows how a massive wildfire that has destroyed 30 homes in the province's southeast was sparked by a flicked cigarette.

    B.C. Forests Minister Looking For Video To Help Solve Wildfire's Cause

    Statistics Canada Says Consumer Price Index Up 1.3 Per Cent From Year Ago

    Statistics Canada Says Consumer Price Index Up 1.3 Per Cent From Year Ago
    OTTAWA — The increased cost of filling a grocery cart over the past year was more than enough to offset a drop in the price of putting gas the car, according to the latest inflation report from Statistic Canada.

    Statistics Canada Says Consumer Price Index Up 1.3 Per Cent From Year Ago

    Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre Unveils Plan For Taxi Industry

    Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre Unveils Plan For Taxi Industry
    "The whole taxi industry is now ready to turn the corner," Mayor Denis Coderre told a news conference Thursday as he released details of the plan.

    Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre Unveils Plan For Taxi Industry

    Public Servant Fired After Five Phoney Resumes As Government Tackles Fraud

    Public Servant Fired After Five Phoney Resumes As Government Tackles Fraud
    A federal worker lost her job earlier this year for fudging her resume in five different applications for various jobs in the public service.

    Public Servant Fired After Five Phoney Resumes As Government Tackles Fraud

    Bill C-24, The New Citizenship Law, Treats Naturalized Canadians As Second-Class Citizens?

    Bill C-24, The New Citizenship Law, Treats Naturalized Canadians As Second-Class Citizens?
     A new law that gives the federal government the power to revoke Canadian citizenship for certain dual nationals undermines the country's identity and violates its Constitution

    Bill C-24, The New Citizenship Law, Treats Naturalized Canadians As Second-Class Citizens?