Close X
Wednesday, October 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Vexatious Litigant' Charles Bryfogle Banned From Entering Any Courthouse In British Columbia

The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2015 11:40 AM
  • 'Vexatious Litigant' Charles Bryfogle Banned From Entering Any Courthouse In British Columbia
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A 74-year-old man who wrongfully acted as a lawyer and created legal documents has been banned from entering any courthouse in British Columbia.
 
Charles Bryfogle has been found guilty on eight counts of being in contempt of court and is forbidden from filing legal documents on behalf of himself or others.
 
The ruling in B.C. Supreme Court in Kamloops came after a legal action by the province's regulator for lawyers.
 
The B.C. Law Society wanted to see Bryfogle go to jail for 21 days, but Justice Victoria Gray handed him a three-year suspended sentence and said he will jailed if he breaches his probation terms.
 
Brydogle has been declared a "vexatious litigant" in both B.C. and Arizona. The term applies to people who consistently engage in court actions that harass people or undermine the justice system.
 
Gray called Bryfogle's conduct troubling.
 
“Mr. Bryfogle is not a lawyer and has never been a lawyer,” she wrote in a decision released Friday.
 
Court records show Bryfogle's legal misadventures have included representing litigants in a case involving mercury poisoning from dental work, creating a trust document, and slander and defamation against his own family.
 
At times he has been paid for his work. He breached previous terms of orders requiring him to inform the B.C. Law Society of any legal action.

MORE National ARTICLES

Will Tax Measures Benefiting All Families Benefit Federal Political Leaders?

Will Tax Measures Benefiting All Families Benefit Federal Political Leaders?
OTTAWA — When the prime minister says the government's new tax package will benefit all Canadian families with children under 18, will that include his own?

Will Tax Measures Benefiting All Families Benefit Federal Political Leaders?

Ontario Premier Says Indiana's Religious Objections Law Discriminates Against Gay Couples

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, who is openly gay, is urging businesses upset by a so-called religious objections law in Indiana to set up shop in her province.

Ontario Premier Says Indiana's Religious Objections Law Discriminates Against Gay Couples

Citizenship Ceremony Marks 100 Days To Pan Am Games

Citizenship Ceremony Marks 100 Days To Pan Am Games
TORONTO — Zsofi Balasz hadn't even received her Canadian passport when she competed for her new country in the Pan Am Games in Rio de Janeiro.

Citizenship Ceremony Marks 100 Days To Pan Am Games

Widespread Use Of Drones By Business Years Away, Experts Say

Widespread Use Of Drones By Business Years Away, Experts Say
Businesses may have started planning for the day when drones help their future plans take flight, but experts say corporate visions will have to stay more grounded for several years.

Widespread Use Of Drones By Business Years Away, Experts Say

Damaged Nova Scotia Tall Ship Towed Inshore After Difficult Rescue At Sea

Damaged Nova Scotia Tall Ship Towed Inshore After Difficult Rescue At Sea
PORTSMOUTH, N.H. — A disabled Nova Scotia tall ship that suffered a series of equipment failures off the U.S. East Coast has been towed inshore.

Damaged Nova Scotia Tall Ship Towed Inshore After Difficult Rescue At Sea

Canadian Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell Hospitalized In Los Angeles

Canadian Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell Hospitalized In Los Angeles
LOS ANGELES — Joni Mitchell was in intensive care in a Los Angeles-area hospital on Tuesday, according to the Twitter account and website of the folk singer and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer.

Canadian Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell Hospitalized In Los Angeles