Close X
Sunday, October 6, 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

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge
    MONTREAL — Activist investor Bill Ackman says he still has faith Valeant's CEO, hours after investors apparently reacted to publication of his earlier doubts by sending the company's stock to a more than two-year low.

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge

    Canada Lets Detained Anti-radicalization Activist Mourad Benchellali Leave For France

    Canada Lets Detained Anti-radicalization Activist Mourad Benchellali Leave For France
    Mourad Benchellali flew back to France late Wednesday, two days after Canadian immigration authorities refused to allow the former Guantanamo inmate into the country for a speaking tour.

    Canada Lets Detained Anti-radicalization Activist Mourad Benchellali Leave For France

    Global Climate Change Poll Suggests Canada Not Too Worried

    Global Climate Change Poll Suggests Canada Not Too Worried
    The study from the Pew Research Centre found Canada is among the 40 countries where most people agree that global warming is a very serious problem.

    Global Climate Change Poll Suggests Canada Not Too Worried

    Pan Am Games Within $2.4-billion Budget, Ontario Government Says

    Pan Am Games Within $2.4-billion Budget, Ontario Government Says
    TORONTO — The Ontario government says this summer’s Pan Am and Parapan Am Games came within the $2.4-billion budget.

    Pan Am Games Within $2.4-billion Budget, Ontario Government Says

    Canada's New Defence Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan Is Used To Dealing With Tough Characters

    Canada's New Defence Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan Is Used To Dealing With Tough Characters
    When Harjit Singh Sajjan went to join the Canadian military 26 years ago, he was rejected by the first unit where he applied. But he stuck it out 

    Canada's New Defence Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan Is Used To Dealing With Tough Characters

    Richmond's Secret Decorator Mulls Seasonal Surprise As Minister Seeks Wreathed Lion Return To Bridge

    Richmond's Secret Decorator Mulls Seasonal Surprise As Minister Seeks Wreathed Lion Return To Bridge
    Each Christmas, for more than 16 years, Mauro Azzano secretly hung wreaths and bows around the necks of the huge stone lions at the south end of the Lions Gate Bridge, connecting Vancouver and the North Shore.

    Richmond's Secret Decorator Mulls Seasonal Surprise As Minister Seeks Wreathed Lion Return To Bridge