Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mary Hare, Student Whose Throat Was Slashed In UBC Dormitory Alleges Negligence In Lawsuit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jul, 2018 12:46 PM
    VANCOUVER — A young woman whose throat was slashed inside a University of British Columbia student residence has filed a lawsuit against the school alleging negligence.
     
     
    The notice of civil claim says Mary Hare was inside her room in Salish House in October 2016 when international student Thamer Almestadi entered carrying a knife.
     
     
    Almestadi's trial heard he knocked on the 19-year-old's door, slit her throat and started choking her before other students pulled him off.
     
     
    A court found the teen not criminally responsible because he was suffering from a psychotic episode in which he believed the Qur'an had sent him a message to kill Hare.
     
     
    Hare alleges in the lawsuit filed in B.C. Supreme Court that UBC failed to install or properly install a peephole or any chains, bars or latches that would allow a door to be opened safely while remaining locked and preventing unwanted entry of potential assailants.
     
     
    None of the allegations has been proven in court and the university has not yet filed a statement of defence.
     
     
    The lawsuit says UBC should have been aware of the risks of forced entry and assaults in dormitory rooms.
     
     
    "The assault occurred due to the negligence of UBC," it says.
     
     
    The university failed "to take any, or any reasonable, care for the plaintiff's safety while knowing, or having ought to have known that she was at risk of imminent danger, violence and/or threat," it adds.
     
     
    The documents say Hare suffered lacerations and abrasions on her throat, a cut to her shoulder, injuries to her trachea and larynx and still has scars from the attack.
     
     
    She also continues to suffer depression, anxiety, emotional upset and post-traumatic stress disorder, the lawsuit says.
     
     
    She is seeking damages for her pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, medical expenses and past and future wage loss. No specific dollar amount is provided.
     
     
    The B.C. Review Board discharged Almestadi from a psychiatric hospital earlier this year in order for him to return to his home country of Saudi Arabia, where his parents had designed a treatment plan.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crown Appealing Acquittal Of Driver Who Killed Doctor Alphonsus Hui In Vancouver

    Crown Appealing Acquittal Of Driver Who Killed Doctor Alphonsus Hui In Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — An appeal has been launched after a British Columbia man was acquitted of dangerous driving in a crash that killed a doctor in Vancouver.

    Crown Appealing Acquittal Of Driver Who Killed Doctor Alphonsus Hui In Vancouver

    Toronto Boy, 13, Charged With First-Degree Murder After Cyclist Run Down, Stabbed: Police

    Toronto Boy, 13, Charged With First-Degree Murder After Cyclist Run Down, Stabbed: Police
    Aaron Rankine-Wright, 19, was struck late Saturday afternoon, three males got out of the vehicle and allegedly began assaulting him as he lay on the ground.

    Toronto Boy, 13, Charged With First-Degree Murder After Cyclist Run Down, Stabbed: Police

    Stolen Diamond-Studded Golden Eagle In B.C. Worth $930,450, Not $7M, Owner Claims In Lawsuit

    Stolen Diamond-Studded Golden Eagle In B.C. Worth $930,450, Not $7M, Owner Claims In Lawsuit
    Ron Shore's company Forgotten Treasures International Inc. has filed a lawsuit in B.C. Supreme Court against several insurers for denying his claim over the theft of the eagle.

    Stolen Diamond-Studded Golden Eagle In B.C. Worth $930,450, Not $7M, Owner Claims In Lawsuit

    Police Need Policy On 'Grievous Bodily Harm' Calls: B.C. Coroner's Inquest

    Police Need Policy On 'Grievous Bodily Harm' Calls: B.C. Coroner's Inquest
     Jurors who heard this week about a woman who spent four days paralyzed and dying inside her home in rural British Columbia say police and their dispatchers need to review how they handle serious calls.

    Police Need Policy On 'Grievous Bodily Harm' Calls: B.C. Coroner's Inquest

    Woman Must Pay Musician Ex-Boyfriend $350k For Sabotaging Coveted Opportunity

    Woman Must Pay Musician Ex-Boyfriend $350k For Sabotaging Coveted Opportunity
    TORONTO — A woman who sabotaged her boyfriend's highly coveted career opportunity apparently because she feared he would leave her for the United States has been ordered to pay him $350,000 in damages.

    Woman Must Pay Musician Ex-Boyfriend $350k For Sabotaging Coveted Opportunity

    Only Canadian Woman To Have Name Engraved On Stanley Cup, Sonia Scurfield, Dies

    Only Canadian Woman To Have Name Engraved On Stanley Cup, Sonia Scurfield, Dies
    CALGARY — Sonia Scurfield, the only Canadian woman to have her name engraved on the Stanley Cup, has died at Foothills Hospital in Calgary at the age of 89.

    Only Canadian Woman To Have Name Engraved On Stanley Cup, Sonia Scurfield, Dies