Close X
Sunday, October 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

N.S. Woman Wins Damages From 'Trusted' Man Who Sexually Assaulted Her

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jan, 2017 05:34 PM
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia woman has won $160,000 in damages from a once-trusted man more than twice her age who sexually assaulted her.
     
    "There is no rational explanation for his conduct other than simple selfish, callous lechery," Justice Gregory Warner said in a decision released Friday.
     
    The woman, who was 23 at the time, sued the man after he forcibly touched her genitals when she booked a ride at his horse-riding stables on Sept. 14, 2010.
     
    The man insisted she had come on to him, and he only touched her "on her belly."
     
    But the Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge said he believed her.
     
    "Her evidence ... make sense," the judge said. "His evidence made no sense whatsoever."
     
    The ruling noted the woman had been sexually assaulted twice previously and suffered from depression, but was social and enjoyed hobbies. But since the 2010 assault, her life spiralled "out of control." She had attempted suicide and was diagnosed with severe PTSD.
     
    Criminal charges were dropped against the man, who was 54 at the time, because of her mental state, according to the ruling.
     
    The woman had known the older man since she started horse riding when she was 11 or 12 years old. "She trusted (him) and had a good relationship with him," the ruling said.
     
     
    On that morning in 2010, though, she testified he asked her questions about her sexual relationship with her boyfriend as they rode together, and made sexual suggestions to her.
     
    "It was the first time he came across as creepy," said the judge.
     
    After the ride, she tried to leave, but he forcibly walked her into his house and locked the door, according to the ruling. She feared for her life, and repeatedly said "no" as he pulled down her pants.
     
    She ran into a bathroom, and called and texted her then-boyfriend for help. 
     
    Her ex-boyfriend testified he heard the older man break into the bathroom as they talked, and heard the man tell her he had touched her.
     
    The woman was a lot smaller than the man, and managed to escape through his legs and flee the house.
     
    She said he yelled after her: "Please come back. Don't call the police. Please don't do this to me."
     
    The man testified that she had tried to seduce him, but said she needed to go to the washroom first and once inside the bathroom, she began screaming.
     
    The judge said he didn't believe the man.
     
    "I accept her evidence that there would have been no reason whatsoever for her to initiate sexual contact," noting her "visceral" denial of a defence lawyer's suggestion she found the moment exciting.
     
    The woman's then-boyfriend said she changed significantly after the assault, and he was unable to handle her personal issues and said he "had to move on for his own benefit," according to the ruling. 
     
    She is suicidal and now lives at home, with her mother present constantly. She has been treated for several overdoses, and once went to a Halifax bridge to kill herself.
     
    She fears, and avoids, men.
     
     
     
    "There is no justification or excuse advanced by (the man) that can diminish the deliberate, selfish and callous invasion of (her) integrity and personality," said the judge.
     
    The judge awarded her $140,000 in general damages, and another $20,000 in punitive damages.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa's Economic Advisers To Meet Morneau To Discuss Canada's Weak Growth

    Ottawa's Economic Advisers To Meet Morneau To Discuss Canada's Weak Growth
    OTTAWA — A team of federal advisers recruited to help resurrect Canada's sagging economic growth has been exploring opportunities around trade, infrastructure, innovation and labour markets, says the group's chair, Dominic Barton.

    Ottawa's Economic Advisers To Meet Morneau To Discuss Canada's Weak Growth

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised
    Residents of a Rocky Mountain community are being chastised after nine black bears were killed in a single week for raiding garbage cans and becoming too accustomed to humans.

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT
    GURDEV “Dave” Hair, 45, of Abbotsford was killed in a shooting on Wednesday night in the 3100-block of Crown Court of Abbotsford, the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) announced on Thursday. He was known to police.

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently
    US presidential candidate Donald Trump has more psychopathic traits than Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, a new Oxford study has claimed.

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — Shergo Kurdi lifts his shirt to reveal a pale, mottled patchwork of burn scars on his belly and chest — a legacy, he says, of years spent ironing fabric in a Turkish clothing factory after he and his family fled war-torn Syria in 2012.

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana
    VANCOUVER — A study by researchers at the University of British Columbia suggests that while the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana causes laziness, adding a medicinal component of pot doesn't change that behaviour.

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana