Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Court Rules B.C. Doesn't Have To Pay Full $8 Million For Ivan Henry's Wrongful Conviction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2016 10:09 AM
    VANCOUVER — A man who was wrongfully imprisoned for nearly three decades has had his compensation award cut by the British Columbia Supreme Court.
     
    The court ordered the B.C. government in June to pay Ivan Henry $8 million in damages after he spent 27 years in prison for sexual assault before a court overturned the conviction in 2010.
     
    Henry sued the City of Vancouver and the federal and provincial governments, but settled with the city and federal government for an undisclosed amount in 2015 while his case against the province went ahead.
     
    The province then went back to court, asking it to deduct the amount of those undisclosed settlements from the total damages award. 
     
    Justice Christopher Hinkson said in a ruling issued last week that the lawsuit against the three levels of government was indivisible, so the claims should also be unified.
     
    "While the allegations against the settling defendants and non-settling defendants were based upon different allegations of fault, the relief sought was essentially the same: compensation for a wrongful conviction and some 27 years of incarceration," he wrote.
     
     
     
    "I find that at least some of the settlement funds paid by the settling defendants to the plaintiff must be deducted from the damages that I have found the plaintiff is owed by the province."
     
    The ruling did not say how much the city and federal government settled for or how much the province must now pay Henry.
     
    Henry's lawyers declined comment on the decision or whether they will appeal.
     
    They argued in court that Henry should be awarded as much as $43 million for damages.  
     
    Hinkson wrote in his original ruling on the compensation award that Henry likely would have been acquitted during a trial in 1983 if he had received the disclosure he was entitled to.
     
    The judge said the Crown's decision to withhold information demonstrated a "shocking disregard" for his rights and "seriously infringed" on his right to a fair trial.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Rapper Carvel Clayton, 21, Charged With 2nd Degree Murder In Halifax Shooting

    Rapper Carvel Clayton, 21, Charged With 2nd Degree Murder In Halifax Shooting
    HALIFAX — A rapper who made a heartfelt plea for an end to violence after a series of killings in Halifax earlier this year has been charged with murder in a weekend killing.

    Rapper Carvel Clayton, 21, Charged With 2nd Degree Murder In Halifax Shooting

    Othman Hamdan Pleads Not Guilty To Four Terrorism-Related Charges In B.C. Supreme Court

    Othman Hamdan Pleads Not Guilty To Four Terrorism-Related Charges In B.C. Supreme Court
    Othman Hamdan is in B.C. Supreme Court facing charges of encouraging the commission of murder, assault and mischief, all for terrorist purposes.

    Othman Hamdan Pleads Not Guilty To Four Terrorism-Related Charges In B.C. Supreme Court

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities
    The report, titled "Divided City: Life in Canada's Child Poverty Capital," says 133,000 children in Toronto — 27 per cent — were living in low-income families in 2014, the year the data were collected.

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified
    VANCOUVER — The BC Coroners Service has named the 38-year-old man fatally shot by Vancouver Police last week.

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism
    City councillor Janet Davis tweeted Monday that staff were also looking into who is behind the posters, which were spotted in her ward

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism

    First Nation Accepts $50Million Settlement For Land In Nanaimo, B.C.

    NANAIMO, B.C. — Members of a First Nation on Vancouver Island have ratified a nearly $50-million settlement with the federal government, compensating the community for a piece of land in what is now downtown Nanaimo, B.C.

    First Nation Accepts $50Million Settlement For Land In Nanaimo, B.C.