Close X
Monday, October 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Principal Of Toronto Private School Explains Delay In Reporting Alleged Assault

The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2018 12:34 PM
    TORONTO — The principal of a prestigious private boys' school at the centre of a criminal investigation said Sunday he held off on promptly informing police about an alleged sexual assault involving students on campus because the victim hadn't yet told his family about the incident.
     
     
    Greg Reeves, the principal of St. Michael's College School, said he received a "horrific" video of the alleged incident on Monday night, but did not inform police until Wednesday morning.
     
     
    "I assisted him in telling his parents and the following morning — because of my priority in caring for the victim — I shared the video with police," Reeves said in an interview Sunday evening.
     
     
    Toronto police have said they first heard about the video of the alleged sexual assault at St. Michael's from the media on Wednesday and immediately contacted the school.
     
     
    Police sources have said the incident — one of several under investigation — involved a group of students on the football team pinning down another student in a locker room and allegedly sexually assaulting him with a broom handle.
     
     
    Those sources have said a previous incident in a washroom involved members of the basketball team bullying a student and soaking him with water.
     
     
    The Roman Catholic school, which teaches grades 7 through 12, has said eight students have been expelled and another was suspended after internal investigations into both cases. On Friday, the school said it had also reported a third incident.
     
     
    Reeves said the third incident was reported to him by the mother of a student. He said the mother called him on Thursday, and he alerted police the same day. He declined to provide details, citing privacy concerns for those involved.
     
     
    Reeves said he received another video over email Sunday morning, which he did not view but immediately forwarded to police. It's not clear whether that video depicts a new incident or one of those already reported.
     
     
    In a statement released Sunday, St. Michael's said it's launching an "independent examination" into what it called "underlying attitudes and behaviours inconsistent with its culture and values."
     
     
    Reeves said an "external review committee" will be created in the next two to three weeks. He hopes a preliminary examination will be done by spring, with a more in-depth investigation to be completed by next summer.
     
     
    He said the review will examine the traditions and social practices of students at every grade level and interviews will be conducted with students, parents, alumni and current and former faculty and staff.
     
     
    "We hope to make visible what has been invisible," he said. "We have to do better."
     
     
    Reeves said the school will also implement an anonymous tip line in the form of an app, which he hopes will be active in the next few days. He said a social worker will also be hired in the "next couple of weeks," but added that those affected by the recent incidents are being "supported and cared for."
     
     
    He said the junior football team program has been cancelled for the school year, and all sports programming at St. Michael's has been "postponed" until Wednesday. He declined to provide the ages of the students involved in the alleged incidents or say whether they played on any sports teams.
     
     
    Reeves said legal obligations the school abides by in reporting such incidents fall under the Child and Family Services Act. He said he is not aware of children's aid services being notified about any incident.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    ICBC Spends $800,000 In Damage Claims For Ferrari That Crashed Into Pole

    ICBC Spends $800,000 In Damage Claims For Ferrari That Crashed Into Pole
    According to documents filed in B.C. Supreme Court, the plaintiff accidentally drove the 1990 Ferrari F40 into a utility pole on Sept. 9, 2012, leaving it badly damaged.

    ICBC Spends $800,000 In Damage Claims For Ferrari That Crashed Into Pole

    ‘It's Really Frustrating:' Sikh Canadians Dismayed By Extremism Allegations

    ‘It's Really Frustrating:' Sikh Canadians Dismayed By Extremism Allegations
    I almost feel like this obsession with Sikhs shows that India is almost threatened by Sikhs in the diaspora

    ‘It's Really Frustrating:' Sikh Canadians Dismayed By Extremism Allegations

    Vancouver Police Looking For Shawana Chaudhary And Son After Alleged Parental Abduction

    Vancouver Police Looking For Shawana Chaudhary And Son After Alleged Parental Abduction
    Shawana Chaudhary May Be Traveling With Her Son, Emerson Cusworth, And Her Six-year-old Daughter.

    Vancouver Police Looking For Shawana Chaudhary And Son After Alleged Parental Abduction

    Karina Gould Becomes First Federal Cabinet Minister To Give Birth

    Karina Gould Becomes First Federal Cabinet Minister To Give Birth
    OTTAWA — Democratic Institutions Minister Karina Gould has made history — twice over — with the birth of a baby boy this week. She's the first woman to give birth while holding a federal cabinet post.

    Karina Gould Becomes First Federal Cabinet Minister To Give Birth

    Trudeau's G7 Sherpa Says Former Conservative Government 'Suppressed' Diplomats

    Trudeau's G7 Sherpa Says Former Conservative Government 'Suppressed' Diplomats
     Canada's G7 sherpa says the previous Conservative government "suppressed" everything diplomats tried to do during its decade in power.

    Trudeau's G7 Sherpa Says Former Conservative Government 'Suppressed' Diplomats

    B.C. Home Sales To Fall As Interest Rates Rise, But Prices Stay Strong: BCREA

    B.C. Home Sales To Fall As Interest Rates Rise, But Prices Stay Strong: BCREA
    Real estate experts in British Columbia predict residential home sales will dip this year but remain well above the province's 10-year average, although they warn rising interest rates could leave some B.C. households "vulnerable."

    B.C. Home Sales To Fall As Interest Rates Rise, But Prices Stay Strong: BCREA