Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Caitlan Coleman Details Night She Fled From Estranged Husband Joshua Boyle

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2019 04:38 PM

    OTTAWA — Caitlan Coleman says she put on several layers of socks to protect herself before she dashed into the cold late on the night of Dec. 30, 2017 eventually phoning her mother from a nearby pizza shop in her bid to get away from her now estranged husband.


    Coleman and Joshua Boyle were kidnapped together in Afghanistan in 2011 and spent years in captivity before being freed by Pakistani forces and returned to Canada in October 2017.


    Boyle is now on trial on charges that include sexual assault and unlawful confinement, against Coleman and another person.


    Testifying Monday, morning, Coleman said that when she left their Ottawa home, she took a $20 bill she had stolen from Boyle's wallet and grabbed their three children's passports from the bedroom closet over fears their father would take them back to the Third World.


    Boyle made a late-night 911 call on Dec. 30 to say Coleman had run screaming from their apartment, threatening to kill herself, but Coleman says she never had a thought about or discussed harming herself that night.


    Police officers found Coleman at her mother's hotel room and, after hearing her story, said they planned to arrest Boyle that night.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trudeau Says Sorry For Sarcastic Thank You Comment To Indigenous Protester

    Trudeau Says Sorry For Sarcastic Thank You Comment To Indigenous Protester
    HALIFAX — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau apologized Thursday for his sarcastic retort to an Indigenous protester who interrupted a Liberal fundraising event the night before in Toronto.

    Trudeau Says Sorry For Sarcastic Thank You Comment To Indigenous Protester

    Dress Code At B.C. Legislature, Women Make Short-Sleeve Fashion Statement

    VICTORIA — A dress code debate at British Columbia's legislature has prompted some women to roll up their sleeves in protest.

    Dress Code At B.C. Legislature, Women Make Short-Sleeve Fashion Statement

    Ontario's Richmond Hill Town Won't Open Council Meetings With Indigenous Land Acknowledgment

    An Ontario town has rejected a motion to open all its council meetings with an acknowledgment that the proceedings are taking place on lands held by Canada's Indigenous people.

    Ontario's Richmond Hill Town Won't Open Council Meetings With Indigenous Land Acknowledgment

    Ontario'S Highest Court Sets 15-Day Cap On Solitary Confinement

    TORONTO — Ontario's top court says inmates cannot be placed in solitary confinement for more than 15 days, saying anything longer than that amounts to cruel and unusual punishment.

    Ontario'S Highest Court Sets 15-Day Cap On Solitary Confinement

    B.C. Human Rights Tribunal Rules Anti-Transgender Poster Campaign Discriminatory

    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver trans woman who made a human rights complaint about a poster campaign that called transgenderism an "impossibility" has won her case.

    B.C. Human Rights Tribunal Rules Anti-Transgender Poster Campaign Discriminatory

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner
    The service has released the results of its investigation into the deaths of 37-year-old Valerie Theoret and her baby Adele Roesholt outside their cabin near Einarson Lake on Nov. 26.

    Nothing Could Be Done To Stop Emaciated Grizzly That Killed Mom, Baby: Coroner