Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

University of Toronto Prof Bernard Levin To Plead Guilty To Some Child Porn Charges

The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2015 03:01 PM
    TORONTO — The lawyer for a University of Toronto professor who once held the post of deputy education minister in Ontario and Manitoba says his client plans to plead guilty to some of the child pornography-related charges against him.
     
    Lawyer Clayton Ruby says Benjamin Levin will plead guilty to some charges in March while others will be withdrawn. He would not specify which.
     
    Levin — who was on Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne's transition team as she took office — faces a total of seven charges.
     
    The investigation which led to Levin's July 2013 arrest began in the middle of 2012. Officials in Toronto were contacted by authorities in New Zealand and later police in London, Ont.
     
    From late 2004 to early 2007, Levin served under former Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty as deputy minister of education.
     
    He also served as Manitoba's deputy minister of advanced education and deputy minister of education, training and youth between 1999 and 2002.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    High household debt still a key risk to Canadian economy: Bank of Canada

    High household debt still a key risk to Canadian economy: Bank of Canada
    OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada is once again pointing a finger at mounting household debt as one of the biggest weak spots in the country's economic armour.

    High household debt still a key risk to Canadian economy: Bank of Canada

    Slumping oil prices to impact home prices in Calgary in 2015: Re/Max report

    Slumping oil prices to impact home prices in Calgary in 2015: Re/Max report
    TORONTO — Slumping oil prices are likely to impact Calgary's real estate market in the coming year, causing home prices to slow their rapid acceleration in Alberta's largest city, according to a report by realtor group Re/Max.

    Slumping oil prices to impact home prices in Calgary in 2015: Re/Max report

    Today on the Hill: Supreme Court briefs media on coming privacy decision

    Today on the Hill: Supreme Court briefs media on coming privacy decision
    OTTAWA — A decision that could have a major impact on the digital privacy rights of Canadians comes down this week at the Supreme Court of Canada.

    Today on the Hill: Supreme Court briefs media on coming privacy decision

    Lawyers who challenged Nadon appointment to high court get only $5K in costs

    Lawyers who challenged Nadon appointment to high court get only $5K in costs
    OTTAWA — The lawyers who set out to challenge Marc Nadon's nomination to the Supreme Court of Canada have been rebuffed in a bid to recoup their costs.

    Lawyers who challenged Nadon appointment to high court get only $5K in costs

    One in seven people lived in low-income families in 2012: Statcan

    One in seven people lived in low-income families in 2012: Statcan
    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says 13.8 per cent of the population lived in low-income households in 2012.

    One in seven people lived in low-income families in 2012: Statcan

    From dark concrete to glass: National Arts Centre to get major facelift

    From dark concrete to glass: National Arts Centre to get major facelift
    OTTAWA — Nearly 50 years after the National Arts Centre was opened to celebrate Canada's centennial, it will undergo a major facelift to mark the country's 150th birthday.

    From dark concrete to glass: National Arts Centre to get major facelift