Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Edmonton Doctor Ismail Taher's Appeal Of Sex Assault Conviction On Patient Turned Down

The Canadian Press, 14 Jun, 2016 01:19 PM
  • Edmonton Doctor Ismail Taher's Appeal Of Sex Assault Conviction On Patient Turned Down
EDMONTON — The Alberta Court of Appeal has denied a doctor's appeal of his sexual assault conviction.
 
Ismail Taher voluntarily stopped practising medicine after he was found guilty of groping an 18-year-old woman who went to a medicentre in Sherwood Park about a possibly infected nose piercing in August 2013.
 
The woman said he massaged her breasts and touched her buttocks while looking at her other piercings.
 
Taher was sentenced to 12 months probation and told to pay $500 in restitution.
 
The trial judge ruled the woman's testimony was credible and he rejected the doctor's version of events due to "sparse notes, his failure to respond directly to critical questions, and his manner of responding that left her with “the impression that he was being evasive on certain critical points."
 
The justices ruled there was no errors in the judge's ruling and dismissed Taher's appeal.

MORE National ARTICLES

Burnaby RCMP Seek Driver After Vehicle Rear-Ends RCMP Cruiser, Injures Mountie

Burnaby RCMP Seek Driver After Vehicle Rear-Ends RCMP Cruiser, Injures Mountie
The officer was in his unmarked cruiser at the side of Highway 1 in Burnaby, completing paperwork from an unrelated traffic stop

Burnaby RCMP Seek Driver After Vehicle Rear-Ends RCMP Cruiser, Injures Mountie

High Demand, Low Inventory Equals Record Housing Sales In Greater Vancouver

High Demand, Low Inventory Equals Record Housing Sales In Greater Vancouver
The board says homes are selling at an unprecedented rate in communities across the region stretching from Whistler to South Delta.

High Demand, Low Inventory Equals Record Housing Sales In Greater Vancouver

Funding Shortfall Means Fewer Language Classes For Syrian Refugees

In Toronto, no classes will be offered this summer by at least one major organization, while in Vancouver, more than 200 spots have been cut.

Funding Shortfall Means Fewer Language Classes For Syrian Refugees

Scenes Of Destruction As Second Wave Of Residents Return To Fort McMurray

Scenes Of Destruction As Second Wave Of Residents Return To Fort McMurray
Nothing seems amiss looking at the front of Adam Chouinard's Fort McMurray house, aside for the yellow "restricted use" sign taped to the door.

Scenes Of Destruction As Second Wave Of Residents Return To Fort McMurray

B.C. Court Of Appeal Ruling Upholds Federal Dangerous-Offender Laws

B.C. Court Of Appeal Ruling Upholds Federal Dangerous-Offender Laws
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's highest court has overturned a ruling that found nearly decade-old changes to the federal dangerous-offender laws violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

B.C. Court Of Appeal Ruling Upholds Federal Dangerous-Offender Laws

Quick-Thinking Victim Helps Transit Police Make Arrest In Surrey Central Skytrain Assault

Quick-Thinking Victim Helps Transit Police Make Arrest In Surrey Central Skytrain Assault
young woman who endured a nearly 30-minute assault by a fellow transit passenger on Metro Vancouver's SkyTrain is being praised for helping to nab the suspect.

Quick-Thinking Victim Helps Transit Police Make Arrest In Surrey Central Skytrain Assault