Tuesday, April 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. man who viewed child abuse images in B.C. café gets 535 days in jail

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Apr, 2026 09:57 AM
  • B.C. man who viewed child abuse images in B.C. café gets 535 days in jail

A British Columbia man has been sentenced to more than 17 months in prison after police found several collections with thousands of child sexual abuse images in a multi-year investigation in which he was arrested at least four times.

Richmond RCMP say Robert Grant Wilson initially pleaded guilty to one count of possession of such materials on Aug. 5, 2025, before admitting the additional count on Feb. 25.

RCMP say in a news release that Wilson is facing two consecutive sentences totalling 535 days in prison, and must register on the National Sex Offender Registry and obey a 15-year ban on contact with children upon release.

Wilson was first arrested in June 2021 after patrons at a Richmond café saw him accessing child abuse material on an electronic device, and after the Special Victims Unit took over the investigation, he was rearrested in 2024 and "a collection of thousands" of images was found on a phone and computer.

Further charges were recommended and after Wilson's rearrest on an outstanding warrant — in which a new cellphone was located — he pleaded guilty to the initial charge last year.

He released on bail but arrested again after police discovered another collection of thousands of images and videos on the new cellphone, triggering the second charge.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

MORE National ARTICLES

Here's a list of March inflation rates for Canadian provinces

Here's a list of March inflation rates for Canadian provinces
Canada's annual inflation rate was 2.4 per cent in March, Statistics Canada says

Here's a list of March inflation rates for Canadian provinces

U.S. leads spike in applications for Canadian citizenship by descent

U.S. leads spike in applications for Canadian citizenship by descent
Interest in Canadian citizenship by descent among citizens in a handful of countries — especially the United States — surged after the federal government passed a new law clarifying the rules.

U.S. leads spike in applications for Canadian citizenship by descent

Poll suggests more Conservative voters now want to replace Poilievre as leader

Poll suggests more Conservative voters now want to replace Poilievre as leader
A new poll from the Angus Reid Institute suggests a growing number of Conservative voters want to replace Pierre Poilievre as the party's leader.

Poll suggests more Conservative voters now want to replace Poilievre as leader

Decades-old temperature records fall in B.C. as four communities reach record highs

Decades-old temperature records fall in B.C. as four communities reach record highs
Four British Columbia communities set or matched their daily high temperature records on Sunday as warm weather swept across parts of the province.

Decades-old temperature records fall in B.C. as four communities reach record highs

Ottawa announces 'incremental increase' in direct flights to China

Ottawa announces 'incremental increase' in direct flights to China
Ottawa has announced an increase in the number of direct flights permitted to bring passengers and cargo to and from China.

Ottawa announces 'incremental increase' in direct flights to China

Carney pledges regular updates on pivot from U.S. and to 'never sugar-coat' issues

Carney pledges regular updates on pivot from U.S. and to 'never sugar-coat' issues
Prime Minister Mark Carney says he plans to regularly update Canadians with a frank assessment of efforts to diversify away from the U.S.

Carney pledges regular updates on pivot from U.S. and to 'never sugar-coat' issues