Sunday, February 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Sex Offender Martin Tremblay Appeals Dangerous Offender Designation

The Canadian Press, 12 Mar, 2016 02:07 PM
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man who plied two teenage girls with drugs and alcohol, sexually assaulted them and failed to intervene as they died is appealing his dangerous offender designation.
     
    Martin Tremblay of Richmond was handed an indeterminate prison sentence in December for his role in the deaths of 17-year-old Martha Jackson and 16-year-old Kayla Lalonde.
     
    Tremblay was convicted of criminal negligence causing the girls' deaths after he invited them to his home, gave them drugs and alcohol until they passed out and videotaped himself sexually assaulting them in March 2010.
     
    The sex offender failed to help the girls when their conditions deteriorated and drove Lalonde to Burnaby, where he left her on the ground, before Jackson stopped breathing at his home the next morning.
     
    Tremblay is appealing his sentence on the grounds the dangerous offender designation is overbroad and violates his charter rights.
     
    His appeal references the case of Donald Boutilier, where a B.C. Supreme Court Justice ruled such a provision is unconstitutional, but B.C.'s Criminal Justice Branch is appealing the ruling. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Polar Bear Encounters With Humans On The Rise, More Put In Churchill Jail

    Polar bear activity reports from the past three years show the number of documented cases in Churchill has jumped from 229 in 2013 to 351 last year.

    Polar Bear Encounters With Humans On The Rise, More Put In Churchill Jail

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death
    TimberWest Forest Corp. spokeswoman Monica Bailey said an equipment operator was killed Friday afternoon at the company's Bonanza Lake site near Port McNeill.

    B.C. Forestry Company To Suspend Operations For One Day After Workplace Death

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees
    A choir sings hymns of peace on a downtown Vancouver beach while a small dinghy gently coasts ashore and a dozen people in life jackets, including a young boy, alight onto the sand.

    Canadians Gather In B.C. To Demand Safe Passage To Europe For Syrian Refugees

    Potential Tory Leaderships Candidates Test The Waters At Weekend Conference

    With no formal rules in place for the 2017 Conservative leadership vote, no candidate has yet to formally enter the race.

    Potential Tory Leaderships Candidates Test The Waters At Weekend Conference

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby
    The province tabled a bill last December aimed at setting up its own log three years after the Conservatives abolished the federal database for non-restricted guns, known as the long-gun registry.

    Quebec's Proposed Long-Gun Registry Facing Fight From Galvanized Gun Lobby

    Can Canada Meet Its Current 2030 Climate Target? Four Experts Chart A Path

    Can Canada Meet Its Current 2030 Climate Target? Four Experts Chart A Path
    If there is one constant in Canada's two-decade track record of international climate diplomacy, it is a repeated failure to make good on its collective commitments.

    Can Canada Meet Its Current 2030 Climate Target? Four Experts Chart A Path