Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

'This Is An Agonizing Case': Alberta Stays Charges In Death Of Indigenous Girl

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2019 07:52 PM

    EDMONTON - The Alberta Crown has stayed charges against two caregivers of a four-year-old Indigenous girl who died.

     

    The relatives of the girl known as Serenity were each charged in 2017 of failing to provide the necessaries of life, although the charges were not related to her death.

     

    The Crown says it came to the decision after reassessing evidence called at a preliminary hearing and determined there was no reasonable likelihood of getting convictions.

     

    Serenity had a severe brain injury when she was taken to hospital in September 2014 where doctors noticed she was underweight and had multiple bruises.

     

    She remained on life support for about a week before she died.

     

    Alberta Justice Minister Doug Schweitzer says the United Conservative government was not involved in the decision to stay the charges.

     

    "This is an agonizing case," Schweitzer said in an email Tuesday.

     

    "The decision to stay the prosecution was taken independently by the Crown attorneys without any involvement by elected officials."

     

    Schweitzer said that the Crown has one year to potentially reinstate the charges and there is ongoing related litigation and a pending fatality inquiry.

     

    When the charges were laid in 2017 the RCMP noted they were related to the circumstances in which the child lived, noting that the specific injury that caused her death was not criminal in nature.

     

    At the time of her death Serenity lived on a reserve in the central Alberta community of Maskwacis, south of Edmonton.

     

    Last October, her case prompted the then-NDP government to propose legislation that would see First Nations notified if social workers were thinking of removing an Indigenous child from a family's care.

     

    In December 2017, the then Opposition United Conservatives introduced a private member's bill dubbed Serenity's Law.

     

    It called for requiring adults to report to police any child who needs intervention under the threat of six months in jail or a $10,000 fine.

     

    The private member's bill did not pass.

     

    Alberta has about 10,000 children in care; about 60 per cent are from First Nations.

     

    Note to readers: The first two paragraphs in this story have been clarified to make clear the caregivers were not charged in the child's death.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying
    A statement from the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 26-year-old Pee Lee Pi of Surrey was arrested July 12 and charged with the second-degree murder of 68-year-old Tee Bor.

    Second-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against Surrey, B.C., Man In February Slaying

    Tories Ask CSIS To Probe Ex-ambassador's Comments About Advice To China

    OTTAWA - Conservative MPs want Canada's intelligence agency to probe whether a former Canadian ambassador is encouraging China to interfere in the upcoming federal election.    

    Tories Ask CSIS To Probe Ex-ambassador's Comments About Advice To China

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics
    Effective immediately, all hot food and any type of cooking or barbecuing is banned in Coquitlam's Mundy Park.

    Hot Food, BBQs, Banned In B.C. Park As Momma Bear Sniffs Out Picnics

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax
     Nov. 12, 1995: Brenda Way — known as "Pitt Bull" — was murdered and her body left in a parking lot behind a Dartmouth apartment building sometime in the early morning hours.

    Timeline: The Wrongful Murder Conviction Of Glen Assoun Of Halifax

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat
    EDMONTON - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is dismissing claims by conservative politicians that national unity is under threat.

    Trudeau Visits Alberta Pipeline Site, Says National Unity Is Not Under Threat

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground
    "When I drove through, I saw a trailer that was all twisted, up in the air," said Andre Parent, a Montrealer who lives at the Camping Horizon campground in summer.

    'I Saw A Trailer That Was All Twisted': Tornado Tosses Quebec Campground