Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Foster mother granted escorted temporary absences

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Mar, 2022 12:06 PM
  • Foster mother granted escorted temporary absences

VANCOUVER - A Saskatchewan woman who was found guilty of starving to death a girl in her care and abusing the girl's sister has been granted escorted temporary absences from a British Columbia prison.

The Parole Board of Canada says in a written decision that it has granted Tammy Goforth supervised visits in the community for personal development purposes.

She will be allowed to participate in Indigenous cultural activities, including a spirit bath, and to visit a fast food drive-thru.

The board says cultural and spiritual activities are an important part in her healing plan, with escorted temporary absences being the next step.

Goforth was convicted in 2016 of second-degree murder and criminal negligence causing bodily harm and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 17 years.

The sisters, who were in foster care with Goforth and her husband in Regina, were rushed to hospital in 2012 and found to be severely malnourished, dehydrated and covered with bruises.

The four-year-old died of a brain injury following cardiac arrest and her sister, who was two at the time, survived.

MORE National ARTICLES

Climate contributing to B.C. disasters: scientists

Climate contributing to B.C. disasters: scientists
Scientists say climate change is likely playing a role in this week's catastrophic flooding in British Columbia. Highways are blocked and communities have been evacuated after bucketing rain caused mudslides in several parts of the province.

Climate contributing to B.C. disasters: scientists

Singh calls on Ottawa to pay Iqaluit water bill

Singh calls on Ottawa to pay Iqaluit water bill
Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh wants the Liberal government to pay the cost of fixing Iqaluit's ongoing water emergency. The 8,000 people who live in Nunavut's capital haven't been able to drink their tap water since Oct. 12 when it was found to contain fuel.

Singh calls on Ottawa to pay Iqaluit water bill

Greens begin search for interim leader

Greens begin search for interim leader
The Green party is looking for an interim leader to take the helm before a fresh leadership election among its members. The troubled party, which has been beset by infighting and sniping, has accepted the resignation of Annamie Paul who last week stepped down.

Greens begin search for interim leader

51 year old male pedestrian dies after being struck by vehicle

51 year old male pedestrian dies after being struck by vehicle
Officers were called to Davie and Thurlow streets in response to a two-car collision between a Dodge Ram and a Toyota Prius. The impact of that collision resulted in the Dodge Ram skidding and hitting a wheelchair-bound man on the sidewalk of the intersection.

51 year old male pedestrian dies after being struck by vehicle

Canadians preparing for space telescope launch

Canadians preparing for space telescope launch
The James Webb Space Telescope is scheduled to blast off Dec. 18 aboard the Ariane 5 rocket from the Guiana Space Center in French Guiana. The orbiting infrared observatory, a collaboration between NASA and the European and Canadian space agencies, will be 100 times more powerful than its predecessor, the Hubble Space Telescope launched in 1990.

Canadians preparing for space telescope launch

Natural Resources ministry must evolve: Wilkinson

Natural Resources ministry must evolve: Wilkinson
Wilkinson is three weeks removed from the cabinet shuffle that made him the fourth natural resources minister in the last six years. Now after helming the environment department tasked with combating climate change, he's in charge of the department that regulates and promotes many of the products that cause it.

Natural Resources ministry must evolve: Wilkinson