Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Former Arctic priest found guilty on several sex charges

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 12 Sep, 2014 11:04 AM

    IQALUIT, Nunavut - A Nunavut judge has found a former Roman Catholic priest guilty of 24 of the more than 70 sex-related charges he faced involving Inuit children more than 30 years ago.

    Defrocked Oblate priest Eric Dejaeger (deh-YAY'-guhr) had already pleaded guilt to eight counts of sexual assault when his trial began in December.

    In his written decision, Justice Robert Kilpatrick noted that the quantity of evidence in the case had been substantially weakened by the passage of time.

    The trial was marked by high emotion and lurid tales.

    Witness after witness told court that Dejaeger used his position as Igloolik's missionary to lure and trap them into sex, threatening them with hellfire or separation from their families if they told.

    Dejaeger's lawyer questioned the credibility of many of those accounts, but the Crown argued that enough common themes emerged from the testimony that the stories from the victims hold together.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation
    Nine unions have banded together in British Columbia to offer $8 million in interest-free loans to the province's striking teachers while the nurses' union is donating half a million dollars.

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail
    An Ottawa-area business says it's getting abusive emails from people who think it's the same company that Ontario's Human Rights Tribunal ruled discriminated against a foreign-born job applicant by telling him it "only hires white men.''

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement
    Labour leaders in British Columbia are expected to announce later today financial aid for the province's striking teachers, who will themselves take a vote on binding arbitration.

    Striking Teachers Get A Helping Hand From B.C.'s Labour Movement

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban
    The Canadian Cancer Society says a new national survey points to the need to ban flavoured tobacco products.

    Survey findings on youth smoking points to need for flavoured tobacco ban

    Media groups warn of job losses, less Canadian content, under CRTC proposals

    Media groups warn of job losses, less Canadian content, under CRTC proposals
    A media marketing company warns that changes proposed by Canada's broadcast regulator will result in significant job losses.

    Media groups warn of job losses, less Canadian content, under CRTC proposals

    RCMP: Police Became Security Guards At Music Festival, Requiring More Cops, Cost

    RCMP: Police Became Security Guards At Music Festival, Requiring More Cops, Cost
    Mounties are criticizing the organizers of a summer music festival near Penticton, B.C., saying police were forced to step in as security guards for a company that failed to do its job.

    RCMP: Police Became Security Guards At Music Festival, Requiring More Cops, Cost