Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trusted Caregiver Jailed For Stealing $260K From Elderly Couple In Port Coquitlam

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2018 10:55 PM

    PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. — A judge has sentenced a caregiver who built a close relationship with an elderly couple in Port Coquitlam, B.C., to 12 months in jail for stealing $260,000 from them.


    Antonette Dizon was sentenced in provincial court on Dec. 13 after pleading guilty to one count of fraud over $5,000.


    She admitted to almost daily withdrawals of up to $1,000 from the accounts of Henry and Helen Abfalter between January 2015 and April 2016 as she helped them with their daily needs, including banking.


    The thefts continued for months after Henry Abfalter died in September 2015 and Dizon had stopped working for the couple, who were in their late 80s.


    Court heard that Dizon, who is 50 years old, used the money to buy a new car, paid tuition for her daughter and sent money to family in the Philippines.


    The Crown had asked for up to 18 months in jail, but Judge Robin McQuillan said her guilty plea, remorse and lack of a criminal record warranted a year in jail and 18 months' probation.


    McQuillan wrote in his judgment that the woman's actions may not have been pre-meditated, but they weren't impulsive because the withdrawals continued over a 15-month period.


    "She had unlimited opportunities to reflect on what she was doing and to correct or at least stop her conduct. She did not do so."


    The judge said he was also mindful that Dizon had suffered humiliation arising from media attention on the case.


    Helen Abfalter has also since passed away and Dizon has been ordered to pay the remaining money owed, $105,000, to the Abfalter estate.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Death Of Burnaby Woman Nicole Hasselmann On Barnet Highway

    A murder charge has been laid against a man following the death of a 34-year-old woman in hospital shortly after the Mounties began investigating a crash on a highway in Burnaby, B.C.

    Man Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Death Of Burnaby Woman Nicole Hasselmann On Barnet Highway

    Some Holiday Light Displays Can Hike Yuletide Costs, BC Hydro Warns

    VANCOUVER — BC Hydro is warning homeowners who string up elaborate holiday lighting displays that those decorations can significantly boost power costs.

    Some Holiday Light Displays Can Hike Yuletide Costs, BC Hydro Warns

    Vancouver Expects To Collect $38 Million From Vacancy Tax In First Year

    Vancouver Expects To Collect $38 Million From Vacancy Tax In First Year
    VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver says it has collected $21 million in the first full year of its empty homes tax and another $17 million could still flow into its coffers.

    Vancouver Expects To Collect $38 Million From Vacancy Tax In First Year

    Raj Grewal Told Liberals He Had More Than $1-Million In Debt

    Former liberal MP Raj Grewal's transactions worth millions of dollars and his movements have been under the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's lens for a couple of months.

    Raj Grewal Told Liberals He Had More Than $1-Million In Debt

    Global Affairs Says Another Canadian Diplomat In Cuba Has Fallen Ill

    Global Affairs Says Another Canadian Diplomat In Cuba Has Fallen Ill
    That includes diplomats posted to the Canadian embassy in Havana, as well as their dependants, who have come down with a mysterious illness that causes dizziness, headaches and trouble concentrating.

    Global Affairs Says Another Canadian Diplomat In Cuba Has Fallen Ill

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Calls Back-To-Work 'The Worst, Most Draconian Legislation'

    Bill C-89 was rushed through the House of Commons and the Senate and went into effect on Tuesday.

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Calls Back-To-Work 'The Worst, Most Draconian Legislation'