Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Last Two Stanley Cup Rioters Sentenced To Time Behind Bars For Assault

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Feb, 2016 01:25 PM
    VANCOUVER — Prosecutions for crimes that took place during the 2011 Stanley Cup riots have come to a close, with two more men sentenced to time behind bars.
     
    Both William Fisher and Jeffrey Milne were found guilty on a series of charges including aggravated assault, taking part in a riot, and break and enter.
     
    Fisher was sentenced to 36 months in prison Friday, while Milne received 32 months.
     
    The sentences are the two highest handed out for crimes committed during the melee, said B.C. Justice Minister Suzanne Anton.
     
    "When you commit criminal acts like that, you can expect that the system will respond. And it has," she said.
     
    The five-hour riot erupted June 15, 2011, moments before the Vancouver Canucks lost Game 7 of the Stanley Cup final to the Boston Bruins.
     
    Businesses and civilians suffered losses estimated at $2.7 million and $540,000, respectively, while the cost to the City of Vancouver, B.C. Ambulance Service and St. Paul's Hospital was $525,000.
     
     
    Anton was a Vancouver city councillor at the time and said she remembers being downtown right after the riots and seeing the devastation.
     
    "I saw the windows broken, the stores looted," she said. "And over the next few days, I spoke to people who were trapped in the London Drugs, who were trapped in the Hudson's Bay, and they spoke to me about the terror that they felt. They did not know what was going to happen to them."
     
    Prosecutors laid 912 charges against 300 suspects, and 284 people pleaded guilty. Another six had the charges against them stayed, while 10 went to trial, resulting in nine convictions and one acquittal.
     
    The convictions and associated sentences will be a deterrent to others who may commit crimes, Anton said.
     
    A report released last month showed nearly $5 million was spent prosecuting the cases.
     
    Both the police and the prosecutors office took the crimes very seriously, Anton said.
     
    "It was a shocking night in Vancouver," she said. "The damage that was caused, the personal terror that it caused people — it needed a serious response and it got one."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former UBC President Arvind Gupta Breaks His Silence Over Resignation

    Former UBC President Arvind Gupta Breaks His Silence Over Resignation
    Gupta calls the released UBC documents a "one-sided representation" of what happened in the months prior to his resignation.

    Former UBC President Arvind Gupta Breaks His Silence Over Resignation

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel
    VICTORIA — A review by a British Columbia's coroners' panel says two issues stand in the way of stopping more young people from dying of overdoses.

    Cut Overdose Deaths Of Young People By Raising Awareness: B.C. Coroners' Panel

    Would-Be Firefighters Flood B.C. Wildfire Service With Applications

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — There is no shortage of candidates to fill the estimated 200 vacant positions expected this summer with the B.C. Wildfire Service.

    Would-Be Firefighters Flood B.C. Wildfire Service With Applications

    B.C. LNG Minister Says 'we're Not Afraid' Of Federal Environmental Tests

    British Columbia's minister in charge of liquefied natural gas is heading to Ottawa for talks on how the federal government's promised changes to environmental reviews will impact the province's plans for a multibillion dollar LNG industry.

    B.C. LNG Minister Says 'we're Not Afraid' Of Federal Environmental Tests

    B.C. Seniors' Advocate To Probe Deadly Violence Among Residents At Care Homes

    B.C. Seniors' Advocate To Probe Deadly Violence Among Residents At Care Homes
    VICTORIA — British Columbia seniors' advocate says 16 people have died in the last three years in a disturbing trend of violence among elderly in residential-care facilities.

    B.C. Seniors' Advocate To Probe Deadly Violence Among Residents At Care Homes

    Ontario Top Court Awards Terminated 'Dependent' Contractors $125,000 In Lieu Of Notice

    Ontario Top Court Awards Terminated 'Dependent' Contractors $125,000 In Lieu Of Notice
    TORONTO — Ontario's top court has shut down another attempt by a kitchen company to get out of paying severance to two workers it alleged were contractors, not employees.

    Ontario Top Court Awards Terminated 'Dependent' Contractors $125,000 In Lieu Of Notice