Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Man Who Assaulted Mom With Toddler Present Declared Dangerous Offender

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2015 01:17 PM
    PENTICTON, B.C. — A Penticton, B.C., man who admitted to sexually assaulting and confining a woman for 15 hours while her toddler was nearby has been declared a dangerous offender.
     
    David Bobbitt, 39, pleaded guilty to seven offences after the July 2011 attack inside his second-hand store.
     
    "I find that Mr. Bobbitt is the very definition of a psychopath," B.C. Supreme Court Justice Peter Rogers said Friday as he delivered his ruling.
     
    "If he were released into the community, he would pose a significant risk of causing profound harm to random victims, and … there is no reasonable expectation that the danger that he presents to the community could be reduced through treatment or supervision."
     
    Bobbitt, who has a shaved head and full beard, looked down throughout most of the 80-minute sentencing hearing.
     
    The victim, who was 22 when he assaulted her, was not in the courtroom, but her father said the family is pleased with the result.
     
    "I'm glad it's done after three years of waiting," said the man, who can't be named because of a publication ban to protect his daughter's identity.
     
    I'm glad that boy is going away and no other people are going to get hurt."
     
    Rogers said dangerous-offender designations, which carry an indeterminate sentence, are reserved as the "only practical method to shield society" from the behaviour of such a criminal.
     
    The judge found Bobbitt to be a "careless liar" who took no responsibility for his actions.
     
    Court heard the woman was shopping for a bed at Bobbitt's store on July 30, 2011, when he struck her over the head with a rubber mallet and dragged her to a bed at the back, where he tied her up and raped her repeatedly while her toddler son was present.
     
    She was discovered 16 hours later by police after family members reported seeing her car in front of the store.
     
    Court heard the woman suffered multiple lacerations to her scalp and needed a blood transfusion and several surgeries. The boy was found wearing a T-shirt soaked in his mother's blood.
     
    Bobbitt was arrested four days later in an orchard south of Oliver.
     
    Another woman told the hearing that in 2007, Bobbitt choked and struck her before sexually assaulting her. No charges were laid as a result of that attack.
     
    Bobbitt said nothing to reporters before stepping into a waiting sheriff's vehicle after the judge's ruling. (Penticton Herald)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta to talk about 'consistent' carbon price at climate change conference

    Alberta to talk about 'consistent' carbon price at climate change conference
    EDMONTON — Alberta's environment minister says the province plans to use the upcoming climate change conference in Peru to discuss a uniform price for carbon across Canada and the rest of the continent.

    Alberta to talk about 'consistent' carbon price at climate change conference

    Woman shot in 1989 Montreal Massacre remembers confronting killer

    Woman shot in 1989 Montreal Massacre remembers confronting killer
    MONTREAL — Nathalie Provost will never forget confronting gunman Marc Lepine just before he shot her four times during an armed assault that left 14 women dead at Montreal's Ecole polytechnique.

    Woman shot in 1989 Montreal Massacre remembers confronting killer

    Canada loses 10,700 jobs in November, jobless rate up slightly to 6.6 per cent

    Canada loses 10,700 jobs in November, jobless rate up slightly to 6.6 per cent
    OTTAWA — The overall drop in Canada's job market last month was so small it fell within the survey's rounding error, but experts remained optimistic Friday about the country's labour prospects for the future.

    Canada loses 10,700 jobs in November, jobless rate up slightly to 6.6 per cent

    Northern B.C. First Nations to pursue part ownership of LNG, mining projects

    Northern B.C. First Nations to pursue part ownership of LNG, mining projects
    A group of B.C. First Nations has joined forces in hopes of taking the reins on natural gas and mining projects in the province's resource-rich north.

    Northern B.C. First Nations to pursue part ownership of LNG, mining projects

    Canadian Officials Hope Avian Flu Outbreak Contained To 4 Farms; 35,000 Birds To Be Euthanized

    Canadian Officials Hope Avian Flu Outbreak Contained To 4 Farms; 35,000 Birds To Be Euthanized
    Canadian officials hope an avian flu outbreak has been contained to four quarantined poultry farms in British Columbia.

    Canadian Officials Hope Avian Flu Outbreak Contained To 4 Farms; 35,000 Birds To Be Euthanized

    Veterans deserve special constitutional rights like aboriginals, lawyer argues

    Veterans deserve special constitutional rights like aboriginals, lawyer argues
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer representing six soldiers disabled while fighting for Canada in Afghanistan says veterans deserve special treatment under the constitution in the same way aboriginals are given unique rights.

    Veterans deserve special constitutional rights like aboriginals, lawyer argues