Tuesday, January 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Crown wants 25 years for sex-abusing former Arctic priest

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jan, 2015 10:40 AM

    IQALUIT, Nunavut — Prosecutors have asked an Arctic court to sentence a defrocked priest convicted of sexually abusing dozens of Inuit children to 25 years in prison.

    "(Eric Dejaeger) appears to have no insight into why he offended and he didn't stop until he got caught," said head Crown prosecutor Doug Curliss.

    Dejaeger, a former Oblate missionary, is facing sentencing on 32 counts of sexual abuse committed when he was stationed in Igloolik, Nunavut, between 1978 and 1982.

    Final sentencing arguments before Justice Robert Kilpatrick were made Wednesday after two days of victim impact statements. In deeply emotional testimony, witnesses from Igloolik told how they've been left with permanent mental and physical scars.

    One man said that the smell of moldy wood takes him back to the mission's boiler room where Dejaeger raped him.

    A woman told court she blames Dejaeger for the scars that have been diagnosed on her womb. Others say they still suffer nightmares.

    Many spoke of lingering anger and depression and of attempts to flee those feelings through booze and drugs. One victim blamed her illiteracy on Dejaeger, saying she was left with a fear of school that prevented her from learning.

    Dejaeger blighted his victims' lives, said Curliss.

    "They look back and think, 'If this hadn't happened to me, what would I have been?'"

    About 25 people attended the Iqaluit courtroom, Nunavut's largest.

    Curliss's remarks were punctuated by muffled weeping. At least twice, victims left court in tears.

    In Igloolik, a live satellite link allowed more victims and community members to watch the proceedings at the local government building.

    The Nunavut government has made extra mental-health workers available to people in court and in Igloolik to help with the mental stress.

    If the Crown's recommendation is accepted, the 67-year-old Dejaeger would face 17 years in jail after credit for time served in remand is subtracted.

    Defence lawyer Malcolm Kempt was scheduled to make his sentencing arguments later Wednesday. Kilpatrick was expected to reserve his decision.

    Dejaeger was convicted in September on 24 counts of indecent assault, one of unlawful confinement, two of buggery, three of unlawful sexual intercourse, one of sexual assault and one of bestiality. He pleaded guilty to eight sex-related counts at the start of the trial.

    The victims include 12 boys and 10 girls. Most were between the ages of eight and 12, although they could have been as young as four and as old as 18. Dejaeger also abused a dog in front of two children.

    Many testified at trial that Dejaeger used his position to trap them into sex, threatening them with hellfire or separation from their families if they told. Sometimes he dangled food in front of hungry children as a lure.

    He is to appear in Edmonton on Friday on four separate sex-related charges.

    Dejaeger has already served one five-year sentence on 11 counts of assaulting children in Baker Lake, Nunavut, where he was posted after Igloolik.

    It was in 1995, after he had served that sentence, that he learned RCMP were about to charge him for his activities in Igloolik. Before his court date arrived, he fled to his native Belgium.

    Oblate officials have acknowledged that they knew Dejaeger was about to depart. They have also said that Canadian justice officials suggested that the easiest thing was for him to simply leave Canada, where he had become a citizen. They have said Dejaeger was told he wouldn't be bothered if he stayed away.

    For 16 years, he lived quietly in homes maintained by the Oblates despite an international warrant for his arrest. Eventually, journalists revealed that Dejaeger was living illegally in Belgium. He was returned to Canada in 2011.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Review Launched, More Penalties Meted Out In Dalhousie University Scandal

    Review Launched, More Penalties Meted Out In Dalhousie University Scandal
    The 13 male dentistry students at Dalhousie University who were allegedly members of a Facebook page where sexually violent content about women was posted will no longer attend classes with the rest of their classmates, the president of the university announced Friday.

    Review Launched, More Penalties Meted Out In Dalhousie University Scandal

    Calgary's Gagandeep Sidhu Gets Life In Prison For Dragging Wife From Car, Then Strangling Her

    Calgary's Gagandeep Sidhu Gets Life In Prison For Dragging Wife From Car, Then Strangling Her
    A Calgary court was told the crime occurred when Gagandeep Sidhu, 34, and his wife Monisha Sidhu, 26, got into an argument while on their way to the Peter Lougheed Centre March 29, 2013 for him to see a doctor

    Calgary's Gagandeep Sidhu Gets Life In Prison For Dragging Wife From Car, Then Strangling Her

    Surrey Six Convicted Murderers Cody Haevischer, Matthew Johnston Appeal Verdict

    Surrey Six Convicted Murderers Cody Haevischer, Matthew Johnston Appeal Verdict
    Cody Haevischer and Matthew Johnston were each convicted of conspiracy and six counts of first-degree murder, for which they received mandatory life sentences with no parole for 25 years.

    Surrey Six Convicted Murderers Cody Haevischer, Matthew Johnston Appeal Verdict

    B.C. Man Says He Awoke To Find His Former Social Worker Shaving His Body Hair

    B.C. Man Says He Awoke To Find His Former Social Worker Shaving His Body Hair
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A Lytton, B.C., man has tearfully testified that he awoke naked to find his former social worker shaving off most of his body hair.

    B.C. Man Says He Awoke To Find His Former Social Worker Shaving His Body Hair

    Blaney to represent Canada at Sunday unity rally in Paris

    Blaney to represent Canada at Sunday unity rally in Paris
    OTTAWA — Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney will represent Canada at a unity rally in Paris on Sunday, a show of solidarity in the wake of the terror attacks which rocked France this week.

    Blaney to represent Canada at Sunday unity rally in Paris

    Donate sign removed from Harper terrorism page to "avoid confusion," say Tories

    Donate sign removed from Harper terrorism page to
    OTTAWA — The Conservative Party of Canada has removed a "Donate Now" button from a web page which highlighted Stephen Harper's comments about the deadly Paris terrorist attack, after critics called it crass.

    Donate sign removed from Harper terrorism page to "avoid confusion," say Tories