Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

No 300,000 Fine For NHL Owner Who Damaged B.c. Fish Habitat: B.c. Supreme Court

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Sep, 2015 12:16 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Prosecutors in British Columbia have failed to persuade a judge to increase a fine against the owner of the NHL's Dallas Stars for damaging fish habitat in the province's Interior.
     
    Tom Gaglardi and his company, Northland Properties, were convicted in provincial court in August 2014 on two counts each of harmful alteration of a fish habitat.
     
    Gaglardi was ordered to pay $140,000, but the Crown appealed, asking the B.C. Supreme Court to more than double the fine to $300,000 for the man who also owns the WHL's Kamloops Blazers. 
     
    Justice Susan Griffin said in her ruling that the provincial court judge did not make an error in his penalty.
     
    "The Crown is correct in its position that when a crime is committed by a sophisticated person for purely selfish reasons, the moral blameworthiness of the crime is great," she wrote.
     
    She said Gaglardi's moral culpability was at the high end of the scale, noting the damage to the environment was significant.
     
    But Griffin said the penalty was appropriate under case law. 
     
    "I may have imposed a higher fine in the circumstances, but that is not the test," she wrote.
     
    "It is clear that the sentencing judge considered all relevant factors and I am not able to find that the total penalties imposed, when remediation costs are taken into account, were disproportionately low as to be unfit."
     
    During the trial last year, court heard the Gaglardi family home on Kamloops Lake in Savona — known as Tom's Shack — was undergoing extensive renovations in 2010.
     
    The charges stem from work done along the shoreline of his property.
     
    The trial heard it will take more than 40 years to restore the salmon habitat.
     
    A former Northland employee testified during the trial he was ordered to destroy documents and throw his computer hard drive in the lake when federal investigators began looking into alleged environmental improprieties.
     
    Gaglardi apologized for the damage during a sentence hearing.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Restlessness Resumes On Toronto, U.S. Markets As China Volatility Continues

    Restlessness Resumes On Toronto, U.S. Markets As China Volatility Continues
    The Toronto Stock Exchange's main index showed a triple-digit gain within the first 10 minutes of trading Wednesday but that quickly evaporated.

    Restlessness Resumes On Toronto, U.S. Markets As China Volatility Continues

    Budgets And Balance Are Key Themes In Election Campaign Today

    Budgets And Balance Are Key Themes In Election Campaign Today
    Conservative Leader Stephen Harper is in rural eastern Ontario, where's he's promising to spend $200 million over seven years on expanded broadband Internet access for remote areas.

    Budgets And Balance Are Key Themes In Election Campaign Today

    Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death

    Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death
    Doctors who are willing to assist in a patient's death once the act becomes legal early next year will need to be trained because they've never been taught the procedures for ending a life, the Canadian Medical Association says.

    Doctors group looking at intensive course to train willing MDs in assisted death

    First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant

    First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant
    LELU ISLAND, B.C. — Some members of a north coast First Nation are gathering on a small island near Prince Rupert, B.C., to protest plans for a liquefied natural gas project

    First Nation asserts right to northern B.C. island slated for LNG plant

    Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians

    Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians
    OTTAWA — Upon quitting the Conservative caucus in the spring of 2013, Alberta MP Brent Rathgeber declared he no longer wanted to be treated like a "trained seal," parroting media talking points written for him by the Prime Minister's Office.

    Duffy Trial Sheds Light On Pmo's Power, Hand-holding Of Parliamentarians

    Tar Ponds court action shut down after 11 years of wrangling

    Tar Ponds court action shut down after 11 years of wrangling
    HALIFAX — The law firm that represents Cape Breton residents who launched a class-action lawsuit claiming the Sydney tar ponds exposed them to contaminants has concluded the litigation should stop after 11 years of legal wrangling.

    Tar Ponds court action shut down after 11 years of wrangling