Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Neighbours Take Burnaby Condo Owner To Court Over Allegations Of Prostitution

The Canadian Press, 11 Jan, 2018 12:22 PM
    VANCOUVER — A condo owner has been ordered to stop using his property for business purposes — including alleged "prostitution related activities" — after his neighbours went to court armed with evidence they put together through dedicated sleuthing.
     
     
    Court documents say residents of the building in Burnaby, B.C., started raising concerns in August 2015 about visitors and disturbances at a unit owned by Christopher Nino Diopita.
     
     
    In a petition filed with the Supreme Court of British Columbia, neighbours reported hearing sounds of alleged physical violence and "hysterical screaming" coming from the unit as well as seeing women letting men into the building.
     
     
    Affidavits filed in the case say residents referred to the unit as a "brothel."
     
     
    In a lengthy affidavit, one resident said the activity in Diopita's unit made him feel uneasy, so he started investigating.
     
     
    He did online research, saying he compared a real estate listing for the condo to ads for escort services in Burnaby and found several similarities, including unique carvings on the bed posts.
     
     
    He also contacted several sex workers pretending to be a potential client.
     
     
    "I created a fake online account and contacted women who posted prostitution-related advertisements relating to (Diopita's unit) for the purpose of obtaining evidence that prostitution is taking place," the affidavit says.
     
     
    When asked for a rendezvous spot, some of the women gave the address of the unit, it says.
     
     
    The condo board's petition says the property manager spoke with Diopita about the neighbours' concerns. It says Diopita replied that his girlfriend was operating a tattoo business.
     
     
    The board's bylaws prohibit tenants and owners from using the property to operate a business, and the board sent Diopita letters asking him to stop the alleged commercial activities. He was also issued $8,000 in fines.
     
     
    Diopita, who could not be reached for comment, did not reply to the petition in any court filings.
     
     
    In an 2015 email filed as evidence in the case, Diopita wrote to the building's manager, saying he had moved to Ohio. He described his financial situation as "basically pitiful" and said he was planning to sell the unit.
     
     
    Court documents say he did not respond to the letters or fines, so in November the condo board asked a judge for an order banning him from the property and forcing him to sell his unit.
     
     
    The judge issued an order Tuesday that says Diopita cannot use his condo for any kind of business, including "prostitution related activities," and bans him from causing or allowing unreasonable noise in the unit.
     
     
    He has not been banned from the property or forced to sell the unit.
     
     
    Photo: B.C. Supreme Court

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Latest Stats Show Illegal Border Crossings Continued To Decline In November

    Latest Stats Show Illegal Border Crossings Continued To Decline In November
    OTTAWA — A decision by the Trump administration to yank protected status for thousands of Haitians doesn't appear to have prompted a new surge of asylum seekers at the Canada-U.S. border.

    Latest Stats Show Illegal Border Crossings Continued To Decline In November

    Bad Weather Sets Off B.C. Highway Crashes, Sending Four To Hospital

    Bad Weather Sets Off B.C. Highway Crashes, Sending Four To Hospital
     Four people were taken to hospital after a series of collisions on Highway 5 south of Merritt, B.C., as weather conditions deteriorate on the route.

    Bad Weather Sets Off B.C. Highway Crashes, Sending Four To Hospital

    Former B.C. Fire Chief Found Not Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Volunteers

    Former B.C. Fire Chief Found Not Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Volunteers
    The jury reached the verdicts Saturday in the case of Robert Harold Bennett after deliberating for 3 1/2 days at the courthouse in Prince George.

    Former B.C. Fire Chief Found Not Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Volunteers

    Crash Kills One Person, Injures Two More On Vancouver's Burrard Bridge

    Crash Kills One Person, Injures Two More On Vancouver's Burrard Bridge
    Vancouver police confirm the fatality and say two others were seriously hurt when two vehicles collided on the Burrard Street Bridge just after 1 a.m.

    Crash Kills One Person, Injures Two More On Vancouver's Burrard Bridge

    Two Charges Against Mountie After Man Shot Dead Outside Surrey Police Station

    Two Charges Against Mountie After Man Shot Dead Outside Surrey Police Station
    VICTORIA — Charges of aggravated assault and assault with a weapon have been laid against an RCMP officer after the fatal shooting of a young man in Surrey, B.C.

    Two Charges Against Mountie After Man Shot Dead Outside Surrey Police Station

    B.C. Woman Hopes For Return Of Diamond Ring Mistakenly Donated With Coins

    B.C. Woman Hopes For Return Of Diamond Ring Mistakenly Donated With Coins
    Trinda Gajek was visiting Nanaimo last week when she stopped to ask a young man if he needed some help.

    B.C. Woman Hopes For Return Of Diamond Ring Mistakenly Donated With Coins