Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Inquest into suicide of VPD officer begins

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2023 04:55 PM
  • Inquest into suicide of VPD officer begins

BURNABY, B.C. - The sister of a Vancouver police officer who died by suicide told a coroner's inquest Monday that she believed Const. Nicole Chan was being blackmailed to have sex with another officer in the department.

Jennifer Chan told the inquest she believed her sister's mental health problems stemmed from sexual assault and extortion by her co-worker, culminating in her death by suicide in January 2019.

"I might be paraphrasing but in my mind I thought an officer was blackmailing her to have sex with her basically, and I knew that the officer was in HR," she said.

Chan said her sister Nicole struggled with anxiety and depression after she complained to the police chief in 2017 about inappropriate relationships that she had with two senior officers.

"She really wanted to get back to work and get healthy again, into a mental state where she could go back to work," Chan told the inquest Monday.

Chan described her sister as "very ambitious" and said she joined the Vancouver Police Department in 2011 to "speak up for victims," but that she felt other officers may no longer want to work with her after she made the claim.

She said her sister felt aimless about where her life was headed before her death, that her career had stalled and she had no other job prospects. She added that her sister was hired by the department when she was "just 19 years old."

"She felt that she couldn't do anything else because she stopped schooling soon as she got hired by the VPD," Chan said.

Nicole Chan was on stress leave from the Vancouver Police Department when she died by suicide.

A civil lawsuit filed on behalf of her family last year claims she died during a severe mental health crisis after being "extorted" by an officer to continue a sexual relationship.

The action was filed against the B.C. government, the City of Vancouver, the Vancouver Police Board, the police department, its union and four officers. However, a notice of discontinuance was filed in the case in September relating to one of the officers.

None of the allegations have been proven in court.

The statement of claim says B.C.'s police complaints commissioner asked the New Westminster Police Department to investigate the claims and it recommended charges against Sgt. David Van Patten, who was alleged to have extorted Chan.

The lawsuit says the Crown prosecution service later said it wouldn't pursue a charge.

The lawsuit, filed last January, also says Chan provided an impact statement to the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner just three weeks before she died.

"She's really just kind of pleading for justice," Jennifer Chan told the inquest, summarizing the statement.

"It outlines that she was suffering from mental health challenges, and (it) basically changed her as a person," Chan said. "She believes it stems from sexual assault inside (David Van Patten's) apartment, and she's unable to develop and maintain personal relationships because of that."

She said her sister was "very disappointed with the whole process" and had been actively seeking mental health treatment.

"The conclusion wasn't what she had hoped for, so she was feeling very defeated and did not have much to look forward to in the future," she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada issues $500M in bonds for Ukraine

Canada issues $500M in bonds for Ukraine
The five-year, government-backed bonds were first announced last month. The money raised is expected to be channelled as a loan to Ukraine through the International Monetary Fund so the country can continue basic operations.

Canada issues $500M in bonds for Ukraine

Educated immigrants face underemployment as Canada leads G7 in educated workforce

Educated immigrants face underemployment as Canada leads G7 in educated workforce
Ruchi Gera was a dentist in India before arriving as an immigrant in Mississauga, Ont., in June. While she has a degree in dentistry and a graduate degree in oral medicine and radiology from India, she won't be able to work as a dentist in Canada before passing licensing exams that could take up to three years.

Educated immigrants face underemployment as Canada leads G7 in educated workforce

Most foreigners in Canada stay in province that give them study permit: Report

Most foreigners in Canada stay in province that give them study permit: Report
Quebec showed the highest international student retention rate of around 85 per cent, followed by Manitoba and Alberta (80 per cent).  British Columbia, Ontario, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, and Saskatchewan showed retention rates between 70 and 80 per cent.

Most foreigners in Canada stay in province that give them study permit: Report

StatCan data shows how pandemic changed commutes

StatCan data shows how pandemic changed commutes
A million Canadians took a bus or train to work in 2021, which is less than the 1.2 million who took transit when the data was first collected in 1996 and almost 50 per cent lower than it was in 2016.

StatCan data shows how pandemic changed commutes

Snowstorm paralyzes B.C. south coast

Snowstorm paralyzes B.C. south coast
The snow and freezing temperatures turned many Metro Vancouver roads and bridges to sheets of ice, making the Tuesday evening commute an hours-long ordeal. At YVR, officials are urging patience after an EVA Air flight skidded off a taxiway upon landing Tuesday evening and remains stuck in the grass.   

Snowstorm paralyzes B.C. south coast

SFU Surrey getting a new medical school to train doctors

SFU Surrey getting a new medical school to train doctors
Ten days after being sworn in as Premier of British Columbia, David Eby was at SFU’s Surrey campus to announce $4.9 million in start-up funding for the medical school on Monday and to share some of the first details about the school, which is aiming to accept it first students by September 2026.  

SFU Surrey getting a new medical school to train doctors