Monday, December 22, 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

    Woman Known As 'Black Widow' Agrees To Sign New Peace Bond After Alleged Breach

    Woman Known As 'Black Widow' Agrees To Sign New Peace Bond After Alleged Breach
    HALIFAX — The elderly woman known as the "Internet Black Widow," who gained notoriety for killing and poisoning her intimate partners, has agreed to sign a two-year peace bond at the end of the month.

    Woman Known As 'Black Widow' Agrees To Sign New Peace Bond After Alleged Breach

    Progress Report On Justin Trudeau's Election Campaign Promises, One Year Later

    Progress Report On Justin Trudeau's Election Campaign Promises, One Year Later
    They make many promises to win elections, but often find it impossible to deliver on them once they take office.  Justin Trudeau is no exception.

    Progress Report On Justin Trudeau's Election Campaign Promises, One Year Later

    FREE Bhangra dancing & Dhol drumming for high school credits

    FREE Bhangra dancing & Dhol drumming for high school credits

      South Asian Arts and iLearn DL Secondary School offer students high school credits in ...

    FREE Bhangra dancing & Dhol drumming for high school credits

    Man Killed In Langley, B.C., Homicide Was Hells Angels' Member: Police

    Man Killed In Langley, B.C., Homicide Was Hells Angels' Member: Police
    56-year-old Burnaby resident Robert Green was killed Sunday, but she declined to release his cause of death.

    Man Killed In Langley, B.C., Homicide Was Hells Angels' Member: Police

    Indian, American Protesters Denounce Trump For Divisiveness

    Presidential candidate Donald Trump's address to an anti-terrorism rally organised by the Republican Hindu Coalition drew protests by some Indian Americans and Democratic Party politicians.

    Indian, American Protesters Denounce Trump For Divisiveness

    Quebec City Police Investigating Alleged Sexual Assaults At Laval University

    Quebec City police say they're investigating several reports of sexual assaults that allegedly took place in Laval University residences over the weekend.

    Quebec City Police Investigating Alleged Sexual Assaults At Laval University