Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Bail Revoked For Toronto PhD Student Convicted In 2015 Sexual Assault

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jul, 2016 12:37 PM
    TORONTO — A Toronto man convicted in a high-profile sexual assault case is going to jail after a judge revoked his bail. 
     
    Mustafa Ururyar was found guilty last Thursday of sexually assaulting fellow York University PhD student Mandi Gray, with whom he was having a casual relationship.
     
    On Monday, Justice Marvin Zuker revoked Ururyar's bail — he would have otherwise been in the community until his sentencing hearing, which is scheduled for this fall.
     
    The Crown is asking for a sentence of 15 to 18 months in jail, plus a period of probation.
     
    Gray, who waived the standard publication ban on the identity of complainants in sexual assault cases, took to Twitter to respond to the bail decision.
     
    "I don't feel any joy about someone going to jail," she wrote. "I feel a lot of sadness. All I wanted was to return to campus without further trauma."
     
    Ururyar's attorney, Lisa Bristow, sais she is appealing the revocation, but declined to comment further on the case.
     
     
    Ururyar sexually assaulted Gray at his apartment in the early hours of Jan. 31, 2015.
     
    The couple had spent the previous evening with friends at two bars in downtown Toronto.
     
    At the end of the night, Ururyar became angry when a sexual encounter he wanted with Gray and one of her friends did not materialize.
     
    At his apartment, Ururyar grabbed the back of Gray's head and forced her to perform oral sex before he raped her, Gray testified.
     
    Gray said she did not try to fight back during the assault because she was afraid of what else Ururyar might do.
     
    Gray has publicly alleged the university mishandled her case and has since become a central figure in the fight against campus assaults.
     
    After the guilty verdict was handed down last week, Gray issued a written statement in which she said she was "tired of people talking to me like I won some sort of rape lottery because the legal system did what it is supposed to do."
     
    She also said in the statement that it was her numerous privileges of being an educated, white, heterosexual woman that helped get her case to trial.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Testy Trump Takes His War With The Press To A New Level

    Donald Trump's heated war with the media reached new heights as he turned the brag-worthy feat of raising $5.6 million for veterans' charities into a sparring match with reporters pressing him on the issue.

    Testy Trump Takes His War With The Press To A New Level

    Ontario Attorney General May Look Into Sales Of Tragically Hip Tickets

    Ontario Attorney General May Look Into Sales Of Tragically Hip Tickets
    Fans across the country complained the tickets were sold out almost instantly when they went on presale Monday.

    Ontario Attorney General May Look Into Sales Of Tragically Hip Tickets

    Toxic Splash? Russian Rocket Stage To Come Down In Canada's Arctic Waters

    Environmentalists are angry that a Russian rocket stage potentially carrying highly toxic chemicals is expected to splash down this weekend in a biodiversity hotspot in the Canadian Arctic.

    Toxic Splash? Russian Rocket Stage To Come Down In Canada's Arctic Waters

    Man Accused Of Plotting To Kill Wife, Lover's Husband, Says It Was Just Talk

    Man Accused Of Plotting To Kill Wife, Lover's Husband, Says It Was Just Talk
    PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — The trial of two lovers accused of plotting to murder their spouses heard one of the accused tell an undercover officer it was just talk.

    Man Accused Of Plotting To Kill Wife, Lover's Husband, Says It Was Just Talk

    Futuristic Dubai Office Showcases 3-D Printing's Potential

    Futuristic Dubai Office Showcases 3-D Printing's Potential
    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — There are office printers that spit out documents and others that always seem to jam. And then there those that make the office itself.

    Futuristic Dubai Office Showcases 3-D Printing's Potential

    Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Sentenced To 5.5 Years By B.C. Judge

    Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Sentenced To 5.5 Years By B.C. Judge
    B.C. Supreme Court judge has ruled Christopher Neil's remaining sentence is just over 14 months, six months more time than the Crown had requested. 

    Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Sentenced To 5.5 Years By B.C. Judge