Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court Dismisses Appeal From Halifax Man Over Dangerous Offender Status

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Aug, 2019 07:06 PM

    OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada has decided not to hear an appeal from a Nova Scotia man fighting a ruling that labelled him a dangerous offender.

     

    Lloyd Eugene Bailey was convicted in 2010 of eight charges stemming from a December 2008 attack and sexual assault on a 19-year-old woman at a Halifax hotel, which was interrupted by a hotel manager responding to complaints of screams from Bailey's room.

     

    A jury convicted him of three counts of sexual assault with a weapon and sexual assault causing bodily harm, and for trying to strangle the woman after drugging her.

     

    Crown attorneys applied at sentencing to have Bailey labelled a dangerous offender, which would keep him behind bars indefinitely, because of a history of assaults.

     

    A 65-page psychiatric report submitted during the dangerous-offender hearing concluded Bailey had a "markedly high risk" to reoffend.

     

    In 2017, the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal upheld the trial judge's decision to label Bailey a dangerous offender.

     

    Bailey then appealed to Canada's top court, which has now dismissed his application.

     

    The court didn't provide a reason for its decision, which is generally the case when announcing such rulings.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible
    The added staff bolsters a crew of 100 that has been working around the clock on the blaze which broke out Sunday.

    More Crews Sent To B.C.'s Southern Okanagan Wildfire As Weather Shift Possible

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows
    OTTAWA - Canada will not be spared the impact of food shortages and price shocks if global warming is not kept below 2 degrees Celsius, a new report suggests.

    Canadian Food Supplies At Risk If Climate Change Not Slowed, New UN Report Shows

    Northern Manitoba Community Searching For Answers After Massive Manhunt Ends

    The deputy mayor of a northern Manitoba community at the centre of a massive manhunt says it will be a long time before things return to normal.

    Northern Manitoba Community Searching For Answers After Massive Manhunt Ends

    Munk Leaders' Debate Proposed For Oct. 1

    The Munk Debates launched a website today inviting Canadians to write to the Liberals, Conservatives, NDP and Greens to urge their leaders to participate in a debate in Toronto on Oct. 1.

    Munk Leaders' Debate Proposed For Oct. 1

    B.C. Homicides: Hunt For Fugitives Ends As Bodies Of Kam McLeod And Bryer Schmegelsky Found, Claim RCMP

    Police in Manitoba believe they have found the bodies of the two B.C. fugitives, Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky, in northern Manitoba.

    B.C. Homicides: Hunt For Fugitives Ends As Bodies Of Kam McLeod And Bryer Schmegelsky Found, Claim RCMP

    Congressional Resolution Honoring Guru Nanak’s 550th Gurpurab and Sikhs in U.S. Society

    Congressional Resolution Honoring Guru Nanak’s 550th Gurpurab and Sikhs in U.S. Society
    The Sikh Coalition, the nation’s largest Sikh civil rights organization, endorsed Congressman Cox’s resolution and is grateful for his leadership.

    Congressional Resolution Honoring Guru Nanak’s 550th Gurpurab and Sikhs in U.S. Society