Close X
Tuesday, January 7, 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

    NDP Wants To Scrap Proposed New Spy Powers, Boost Intelligence Oversight

    NDP Wants To Scrap Proposed New Spy Powers, Boost Intelligence Oversight
    OTTAWA — The New Democrats want to scrap proposed new powers for the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, bolster review of intelligence activities and enhance anti-radicalization programs.

    NDP Wants To Scrap Proposed New Spy Powers, Boost Intelligence Oversight

    NDP Would Take From Corporate Executives, Give To Working Poor, Kids

    OTTAWA — Tom Mulcair issued a rallying cry to progressive voters Friday as he unveiled a proposal aimed at taking tax benefits from the rich and transferring them to the poor.

    NDP Would Take From Corporate Executives, Give To Working Poor, Kids

    Two Surrey Men Shot In Seemingly Targeted Incident: RCMP

    Two Surrey Men Shot In Seemingly Targeted Incident: RCMP
    RCMP received a number of calls starting at about 8:40 p.m. Thursday reporting gunshots and two SUVs driving erratically in the same area (near 88th Avenue and 124th Street).

    Two Surrey Men Shot In Seemingly Targeted Incident: RCMP

    Oil And Gas Industry Has No Impact On Health In NorthEastern B.C.: Report

    Oil And Gas Industry Has No Impact On Health In NorthEastern B.C.: Report
    VANCOUVER — Health risks associated with oil and gas activity in the British Columbia's northeastern communities are low, according to a newly released report from the provincial Health Ministry.

    Oil And Gas Industry Has No Impact On Health In NorthEastern B.C.: Report

    Southern B.C. Interior Grassland Conservation Area Expands By 130 Hectares

    Southern B.C. Interior Grassland Conservation Area Expands By 130 Hectares
    VANCOUVER — Protection is expanding for grassland in British Columbia's southern Interior in a conservation area home to as many as 50 at-risk species.

    Southern B.C. Interior Grassland Conservation Area Expands By 130 Hectares

    B.C.'s Plans For Professional Development Of Teachers Irks Union

    B.C.'s Plans For Professional Development Of Teachers Irks Union
    Teachers' union president Jim Iker calls Bill 11 a diversion from underfunding, adding there were no consultations and professional development shouldn't be mandated from the top down.

    B.C.'s Plans For Professional Development Of Teachers Irks Union