Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Man Who Hit Son With USB Cord For Eating Toast Too Slowly Gets Probation

The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2018 12:27 PM
    WINDSOR, Ont. — A man who whipped his six-year-old son with a charging cord for eating his toast too slowly has been given a conditional discharge, radio station CKLW reported Wednesday.
     
     
    In sentencing the man from Windsor, Ont., to three years of probation, Ontario court Judge Sharman Bondy said corporal punishment was no answer to loving parenting.
     
     
    The man, who cannot be named to protect his child's identity, had pleaded guilty to assault with a weapon for the incident that left the boy with welts on his body.
     
     
    School authorities discovered the welts in December 2015, and the boy's father later admitted to hitting him with a USB charging cord.
     
     
    Bondy cited the first-time offender's remorse, guilty plea and efforts at rehabilitation, which include taking anger management and parenting courses. The upshot, the judge said, was that jail time was not warranted in this case.
     
     
    The boy's mother described the father as having a loving and good relationship with his son.
     
     
    "We are pretty positive that he is moving in the direction of completing his probation and he will complete it properly," his lawyer Patricia Brown, told CKLW. "The conviction will not register — he receives a discharge — if he successfully completes probation."
     
     
    Brown said the family was relieved these "significant dramatic circumstances" had now been dealt with.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Truce Called, Wine Flows Again, In B.C.-Alberta Trade War Over Pipeline

    Truce Called, Wine Flows Again, In B.C.-Alberta Trade War Over Pipeline
    VICTORIA — The Alberta government accepted an olive branch from British Columbia and suspended its ban on the province's wine Thursday in a dispute over the Trans Mountain pipeline.

    Truce Called, Wine Flows Again, In B.C.-Alberta Trade War Over Pipeline

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Says Military Working To Settle Class Action Suits Out Of Court

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Says Military Working To Settle Class Action Suits Out Of Court
    OTTAWA — Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says the military is looking to settle several class-action lawsuits filed by members of the Canadian Armed Forces.

    Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan Says Military Working To Settle Class Action Suits Out Of Court

    Expansion Of B.C. Foreign Buyers Tax To Okanagan, Vancouver Island Is Questioned

    Expansion Of B.C. Foreign Buyers Tax To Okanagan, Vancouver Island Is Questioned
    A foreign buyers tax will do little to cool the British Columbia housing markets where it's been expanded, as international purchasers make up only a small percentage of sales and lack of supply is the bigger problem, real estate groups say

    Expansion Of B.C. Foreign Buyers Tax To Okanagan, Vancouver Island Is Questioned

    Indian-Origin Child, 3, Died In UK, Parents Allege Medical Negligence

    Indian-Origin Child, 3, Died In UK, Parents Allege Medical Negligence
    The boy died at Leicester Royal Infirmary in the city of Leicester in November 2015 after being taken to the hospital for vomiting and diarrhoea.

    Indian-Origin Child, 3, Died In UK, Parents Allege Medical Negligence

    $153 Million In Federal Cash To Fund Child Care And Education Training In BC

    Universal child care will allow parents to return to work secure in the knowledge that their children are being cared for by qualified early childhood educators

    $153 Million In Federal Cash To Fund Child Care And Education Training In BC

    B.C. Budget's Housing, Child Care Measures Good For Business: Premier

    John Horgan told the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade today that the financial plan will help attract and retain workers.

    B.C. Budget's Housing, Child Care Measures Good For Business: Premier