Thursday, April 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Charge stayed in 2009 worker's death in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Aug, 2021 04:45 PM
  • Charge stayed in 2009 worker's death in B.C.

A stay of proceedings has been entered in the case of two supervisors and a British Columbia engineering company facing one count each of criminal negligence in connection with a workplace death more than a decade ago.

The B.C. Prosecution Service says in a statement it recently determined the available evidence no longer satisfies the charge assessment standard for a prosecution to continue.

The prosecution service says Samuel Joseph Fitzpatrick died Feb. 22, 2009, when he was struck by a falling rock while working on a hydroelectric project near Toba Inlet, about 160 kilometres north of Vancouver.

The statement says after lengthy investigations by WorkSafeBC, the RCMP and the B.C. Coroners Service, charges were approved in May 2019 and a trial was set to start next week in Vancouver provincial court, but it will no longer proceed.

Burnaby-based Peter Kiewit Sons ULC, construction manager Timothy Rule and crew superintendent Gerald Karjala were each charged with one count of criminal negligence after original investigations allegedly found the work area above Fitzpatrick was not sufficiently cleared of loose material.

The prosecution service statement says the stay of proceedings was issued because the Crown recently decided it did not have the evidence to prove the rock that killed Fitzpatrick originated from the work zone or from another area above the tree line.

"Cumulatively, these changes mean there is no longer a substantial likelihood of a conviction since the Crown cannot definitively exclude the possibility that the rockfall was a random event originating outside the work zone," says the statement.

MORE National ARTICLES

Targeted shootings spike in Vancouver area: police

Targeted shootings spike in Vancouver area: police
Assistant Comm. Manny Mann, chief officer of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit, the south coast agency focused on gang conflict, says Gouwenberg had been connected to the United Nations gang for almost 20 years.

Targeted shootings spike in Vancouver area: police

Budget: $101B in new spending aims to prod growth

Budget: $101B in new spending aims to prod growth
The largest contributor is almost $30 billion over five years to drive down fees in licensed daycares with the goal of reaching $10 a day by 2026. That money is on top of already planned child-care spending.

Budget: $101B in new spending aims to prod growth

1006 COVID19 cases for Thursday

1006 COVID19 cases for Thursday
The hospitals that are moving to urgent surgeries only for two weeks: Surrey Memorial Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, Vancouver General Hospital, Lions Gate Hospital, Abbotsford General Hospita, Burnaby General Hospital, Richmond & St. Paul's UBC Hospital

1006 COVID19 cases for Thursday

MPs agree flights from hot spots should stop

MPs agree flights from hot spots should stop
The House of Commons adopted a motion from the Bloc Québécois this afternoon calling for flights carrying non-essential travellers from certain countries, such as India and Brazil, to be barred.

MPs agree flights from hot spots should stop

Interim B.C. Liberal leader testifies at inquiry

Interim B.C. Liberal leader testifies at inquiry
The B.C. government appointed Supreme Court Justice Austin Cullen in May 2019 to lead the public inquiry into money laundering after three reports outlined how hundreds of millions of dollars in illegal cash affected B.C.'s real estate, luxury vehicle and gaming sectors.

Interim B.C. Liberal leader testifies at inquiry

Climate change to cost more than COVID-19: study

Climate change to cost more than COVID-19: study
Chief economist Jerome Haegeli says the world's current path puts Canada on track to lose seven per cent of its gross domestic product. He says reducing the amount of global warming could cut those costs almost in half.

Climate change to cost more than COVID-19: study