Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Four Years Behind Bars For Community Support Worker Michael Hume Who Sexually Assaulted B.C. Youth

Darpan News Desk, 22 Jun, 2015 11:37 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A community support worker who stripped a young man and shaved his body hair after he passed out should serve four years in prison, a Crown lawyer has argued.
     
    “He was essentially flaunting his power over a disadvantaged young man,” Chris Balison said, adding Michael Hume continues to deny his actions.
     
    Hume, 48, was convicted in January of sexual assault, unlawful confinement and uttering threats after the August 2013 assault at his home in Lytton, B.C.
     
    Hume's defence lawyer, Richard Kaiser, said his client should serve 90 days in jail, on weekends, along with three years' probation.
     
    “Mr. Hume is at a low risk to reoffend,” Kaiser said, referring to a psychological report.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Sheri Donegan is expected to give her sentencing decision on Friday. 
     
    Court heard Hume arrived in the Fraser Canyon community 10 years ago, working first as a youth and recreation counsellor and later assisting with restorative justice and helping young Lytton First Nation members in trouble with the law. The victim testified that included him.
     
    “It placed him in a trust role . . . in a job with court and social issues,” Balison said.
     
    Hume was also active with the B.C. Ambassador Program for youth and married the Lytton band administrator, who has since died.
     
    Kaiser presented 66 letters of support. But Balison argued the court should not consider them because they spoke of a reputation that allowed Hume to be trusted by his victim.
     
    Hume told court that the victim made up the bizarre story after he would not hand over $200, in what Hume characterized as an attempted extortion.
     
    However, the jury sided with the Crown, who said Hume’s story was not believable.
     
    The young man, who can't be identified because of a publication ban, said he'd reluctantly accepted a ride from Hume after drinking at a friend's house because he would have otherwise faced a long walk home.
     
    He tearfully testified to waking up at Hume's home after a drinking session as Hume was shaving his pubic area. Much of his body hair had been removed.
     
    He told court that Hume laughed and said, “Your girlfriend will like it.”
     
    Hume then drove the young man home, gave him $50 and warned him not to tell anyone, court heard.
     
    Hume denied shaving the complainant, though he acknowledged police seized hair from his vacuum cleaner and agreed with the Crown it was not animal hair.
     
    Lytton First Nation Chief Janet Webster wrote a victim impact statement, calling Hume’s actions “a crime against the entire community, not just one individual.”

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ed Sheeran Surprise In Edmonton: Pop Star Joins Eighth Grader For A Duet On Stage At Mall

    Ed Sheeran Surprise In Edmonton: Pop Star Joins Eighth Grader For A Duet On Stage At Mall
    Sydney Bourbeau was half way through covering Ed Sheeran's "Thinking Out Loud" at West Edmonton Mall on Sunday when Sheeran himself, who just happened to be at a nearby music store, hopped on stage and helped her.

    Ed Sheeran Surprise In Edmonton: Pop Star Joins Eighth Grader For A Duet On Stage At Mall

    Homeless Man Finds $2000 On Vancouver Island Street, Brings It To RCMP

    Homeless Man Finds $2000 On Vancouver Island Street, Brings It To RCMP
    LANGFORD, B.C. — Police say a homeless man has turned in more than $2,000 that he found on a street on southern Vancouver Island.

    Homeless Man Finds $2000 On Vancouver Island Street, Brings It To RCMP

    Search For Missing Dad Ends On Vancouver Island; Police, Coroner Still To ID Remains

    VICTORIA — Vancouver Island police say they are working with the coroner to identify human remains found on Thursday during a search for a missing 51-year-old father.

    Search For Missing Dad Ends On Vancouver Island; Police, Coroner Still To ID Remains

    No Charges After Man Complains Officer Kicked Him In Face, Stomped On His Head Near Chilliwack

    No Charges After Man Complains Officer Kicked Him In Face, Stomped On His Head Near Chilliwack
    VICTORIA — B.C.'s Criminal Justice Branch says no charges will be laid against two police officers for allegedly using excessive force in arresting a drunk passenger who walked away after a head-on crash.

    No Charges After Man Complains Officer Kicked Him In Face, Stomped On His Head Near Chilliwack

    New Rules Coming For Companies Risking Hazardous Spills In B.C.

    New Rules Coming For Companies Risking Hazardous Spills In B.C.
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia is unprepared for a major land-based, hazardous-material spill because current rules and regulations are outdated — and that needs to change, says the province's environment minister.

    New Rules Coming For Companies Risking Hazardous Spills In B.C.

    Suspects In Toronto Slaying May Be Headed To B.C., Police Say

    Suspects In Toronto Slaying May Be Headed To B.C., Police Say
    Vancouver police say Clyde Marshall of New Brunswick and Sabrina Chouart of Quebec may be travelling to the Lower Mainland.

    Suspects In Toronto Slaying May Be Headed To B.C., Police Say