Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Top Court Hears Damages Sought By B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years

The Canadian Press , 13 Nov, 2014 01:35 PM
    VANCOUVER — The Supreme Court of Canada is hearing an appeal from a B.C. man whose lawyers say he deserves financial compensation for spending 27 years in prison for several sexual assaults he did not commit.
     
    Ivan Henry filed civil lawsuits in 2001 against the provincial and federal attorneys general, the City of Vancouver and three members of its police department.
     
    In 2010, the B.C. Court of Appeal overturned Henry's convictions after citing problems with the police investigation, the trial judge's instructions to the jury and lack of disclosure of evidence.
     
    Henry represented himself at trial in 1983, when he was convicted of three counts of rape, two counts of attempted rape and five counts of indecent assault in attacks on eight women in Vancouver.
     
    The B.C. Appeal Court has heard that new evidence surfaced during a 2002 police investigation involving another offender who was implicated in 29 cases and lived in the same neighbourhood as Henry.
     
    The Crown has argued in lower courts that the claim should not proceed because prosecutors did not act maliciously.
     
    The BC Civil Liberties Association and the David Asper Centre, which are intervening in the case, say malice has no role to play in awarding damages.
     
    The groups say they will argue that such an approach fails to recognize the distinct nature of claims for damages under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
     
    "Such claims target the state, as opposed to individual prosecutors, and also fulfil the public functions of highlighting the importance of protecting charter rights and deterring future charter breaches."
     
    Henry was arrested in July 1982 in 100 Mile House, B.C., and spent the next 12 years of his indeterminate sentence in a Saskatchewan prison, away from his family. His wife died in 1990.
     
    In 2009, one of Henry's two daughters said outside the Appeal Court of B.C. that her father's sex convictions and dangerous-offender designation had taken an emotional toll on the family.
     
    Tanya Henry said the family was kicked out of neighbourhoods and moved several times to try and hide their identity.
     
    "We have children who don't know their grandfather," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lawyers slam Chris Alexander comments on murder case still before the courts

    Lawyers slam Chris Alexander comments on murder case still before the courts
    TORONTO — Criminal defence lawyers are dismayed that Immigration Minister Chris Alexander publicly branded a man charged with killing his wife a murderer before his trial.

    Lawyers slam Chris Alexander comments on murder case still before the courts

    North Vancouver Braces For More Rain Following Flash Floods Earlier In The Week

    North Vancouver Braces For More Rain Following Flash Floods Earlier In The Week
    VANCOUVER — Another rainfall warning has been issued for Metro Vancouver, just two days after torrential rains caused flooding and evacuations in the District of North Vancouver.

    North Vancouver Braces For More Rain Following Flash Floods Earlier In The Week

    Ottawa says new Montreal bridge will not be named after Maurice Richard

    Ottawa says new Montreal bridge will not be named after Maurice Richard
    QUEBEC — A new bridge in Montreal will not bear the name of hockey great Maurice Richard.

    Ottawa says new Montreal bridge will not be named after Maurice Richard

    B.C. Government Changes Course On Ferry Cuts

    B.C. Government Changes Course On Ferry Cuts
    VICTORIA - In just 24 hours, British Columbia's government went from supporting to sinking a proposal from BC Ferries to stop rising fares by cutting routes and closing terminals in Nanaimo and Horseshoe Bay.

    B.C. Government Changes Course On Ferry Cuts

    Nov. 11 Holiday Bill A Step Closer To Law

    Nov. 11 Holiday Bill A Step Closer To Law
    A New Democrat MP's bid to make Remembrance Day a national statutory holiday is now one step closer to reality.

    Nov. 11 Holiday Bill A Step Closer To Law

    Remembrance Day began modestly as a tribute to the terrible losses of WWI

    Remembrance Day began modestly as a tribute to the terrible losses of WWI
    OTTAWA — It began as a visceral response to the terrible death toll of the First World War, but for Canadians, Remembrance Day has evolved into a tribute to all military dead and a celebration of the Canadian Forces in general.

    Remembrance Day began modestly as a tribute to the terrible losses of WWI