Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Changes To Nova Scotia Law Allow Sex Assault Victims To Sue Retroactively

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Mar, 2015 11:57 AM

    HALIFAX — Victims of sexual assault in Nova Scotia are now able to launch civil lawsuits against their abusers regardless of when the offence took place.

    Justice Minister Lena Metlege Diab introduced amendments today to the Limitation of Actions Act that would allow for retroactive lawsuits.

    The amendments were quickly passed.

    People who said they were sexually abused by Ernest Fenwick MacIntosh lobbied the provincial government for the changes.

    MacIntosh was living in India in 1995 when allegations arose that he had sexually abused boys in Cape Breton in the 1970s.

    The former businessman was extradited to Canada in 2007 and the first of his two trials in Nova Scotia started in 2010.

    His convictions were quashed in April 2013 after the Supreme Court of Canada ruled his case took too long to go to trial.

    The changes brought in today amend a bill first introduced last fall.

    Diab says the provisions were not originally included because of a research mistake in her department.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Police Officer Suspended Without Pay In Tina Fontaine Case

    Winnipeg Police Officer Suspended Without Pay In Tina Fontaine Case
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg police officer who came into contact with a missing teen days before her body was found in a river has been suspended without pay.

    Winnipeg Police Officer Suspended Without Pay In Tina Fontaine Case

    Man Arrested, Ordered To Keep The Peace On Suspicion He May Commit Terrorism

    Man Arrested, Ordered To Keep The Peace On Suspicion He May Commit Terrorism
    OTTAWA — The RCMP have arrested a man after a peace bond was ordered against him based on allegations he might commit a terrorism offence.

    Man Arrested, Ordered To Keep The Peace On Suspicion He May Commit Terrorism

    Halifax Man Accused Of Threatening Police With Chemicals To Stand Trial

    Halifax Man Accused Of Threatening Police With Chemicals To Stand Trial
    Defence lawyer Mike Taylor waived the right to a preliminary inquiry for his client Christopher Phillips, who appeared briefly in Dartmouth provincial court today and was remanded into custody.

    Halifax Man Accused Of Threatening Police With Chemicals To Stand Trial

    Winnipeg Police Should Have Kept Safe Teen Later Found Dead: AFN Chief

    WINNIPEG — Canada's national chief says Winnipeg police should have done their job and kept a 15-year-old girl safe in the hours before she was last seen alive.

    Winnipeg Police Should Have Kept Safe Teen Later Found Dead: AFN Chief

    Lawyer Urges Son Of Ex-hells Angels Boss Boucher To Turn Himself In

    Lawyer Urges Son Of Ex-hells Angels Boss Boucher To Turn Himself In
    MONTREAL — The lawyer for the son of former Hells Angels boss Maurice (Mom) Boucher has appealed to his client to surrender as quickly as possible.

    Lawyer Urges Son Of Ex-hells Angels Boss Boucher To Turn Himself In

    Too Soon To Say Whether Job Cuts Will Follow Heinz-Kraft Merger: Executive

    Too Soon To Say Whether Job Cuts Will Follow Heinz-Kraft Merger: Executive
    TORONTO — A merger between H.J. Heinz Co. and Kraft Foods is expected to generate about $1.5 billion in cost savings, but the companies say it's too early to say whether they will shutter any of their Canadian operations.

    Too Soon To Say Whether Job Cuts Will Follow Heinz-Kraft Merger: Executive