Saturday, June 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Man Pleads Guilty To Sex Attack On Six-Year-Old Girl On Alberta Reserve

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Nov, 2015 01:16 PM
    STONY PLAIN, Alta. — A man has pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a six-year-old girl, beating her unconscious and tossing her body into the woods on an Alberta reserve.
     
    People on the Paul First Nation found the girl's partially clad body in the snow a few days before last Christmas.
     
    She was flown to hospital in Edmonton, where she remained unconscious for several days.
     
    Court heard the child suffered a brain injury and will have life-long complications.
     
    James Clifford Paul pleaded guilty this week at the beginning of a preliminary hearing to charges of sexual assault and aggravated assault.
     
    A sentencing date for the 22-year-old is to be set in the new year, when it's expected other charges of attempted murder and kidnapping will be dropped.
     
    He remains in custody.
     
    Crown prosecutor Jason Neustaeter explained in court that Paul and the girl had been walking along a trail on the reserve towards a convenience store, when he sexually assaulted her.
     
    Paul walked away and got annoyed at the girl for following him. He started beating her and left her battered body in the bush.
     
    Other people walking on the path found the child, took her to a house and called 911. When she arrived at hospital, she was unresponsive and hypothermic.
     
    Paul was arrested on the nearby Alexis First Nation.
     
    His parents, Ramona and James Strong, said that two days later they were forced to move off the reserve because of threats of violence. RCMP helped transport them and their other eight children to an undisclosed Edmonton-area hotel.
     
    "We didn't do anything, and our kids didn't do anything," they said in a statement at the time.
     
    "We just want to say, like everybody else, we are truly and deeply shocked and mortified and still find it hard to believe what happened."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Back To The Future: Is This Oil Downturn A Repeat Of The 1985 Crash?

    Back To The Future: Is This Oil Downturn A Repeat Of The 1985 Crash?
    This is not the worst price crash," said the paper's author, Robert Skinner, executive fellow at the University of Calgary's School of Public Policy.

    Back To The Future: Is This Oil Downturn A Repeat Of The 1985 Crash?

    Newfoundland And Labrador Folk Legend Ron Hynes Dead At 64

    Newfoundland And Labrador Folk Legend Ron Hynes Dead At 64
    His family says he died shortly after 6 p.m. while receiving treatment at the Health Sciences Centre in St. John's. He was 64 years old.

    Newfoundland And Labrador Folk Legend Ron Hynes Dead At 64

    Rona Ambrose turns to defeated Atlantic MP to rebuild Tory support in Eastern Canada

    Rona Ambrose turns to defeated Atlantic MP to rebuild Tory support in Eastern Canada
     Interim Conservative Leader Rona Ambrose is turning to defeated MP Scott Armstrong to advise the party on Atlantic issues after the Liberals swept Eastern Canada in the federal election.

    Rona Ambrose turns to defeated Atlantic MP to rebuild Tory support in Eastern Canada

    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger Says Government Liquor Stores Best Place To Sell Marijuana

    WINNIPEG — Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger says government liquor stores are the best place to sell marijuana if and when the federal government legalizes the drug.

    Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger Says Government Liquor Stores Best Place To Sell Marijuana

    Business Case For Trans Mountain Still Strong Despite Rising Cost: Kinder Morgan

    CALGARY — The Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is getting more expensive, but the company planning to build it says the economic case for the project is still strong.

    Business Case For Trans Mountain Still Strong Despite Rising Cost: Kinder Morgan

    McKenna Blames Previous Conservative, Liberal Governments For Climate Inaction

    McKenna Blames Previous Conservative, Liberal Governments For Climate Inaction
    McKenna says it will take a concerted effort by all Canadians to combat climate change but that the time for inaction and denial is past.

    McKenna Blames Previous Conservative, Liberal Governments For Climate Inaction