Friday, February 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Parents File $12.5 Million Lawsuit Alleging Police Ignored, Hid Evidence In Son's Death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2016 10:42 AM
    TORONTO — An Ottawa couple who has been fighting for 15 years to have their son's death reinvestigated has filed a $12.5 million lawsuit against Toronto police, alleging detectives ignored, concealed or eliminated evidence to support a conclusion that the young man committed suicide.
     
    John and Gloria Connelly are also asking the Ontario Superior Court of Justice to declare that police should investigate their son's death as a homicide.
     
    Their son was 22 and in his third year as a pharmacy student at the University of Toronto when he died in the early hours of Dec. 9, 2001.
     
    The student was found in the parking lot of the building where he lived at around 7:20 a.m., and police quickly ruled his death a suicide.
     
    In their statement of claim, his parents allege that much of the information police relied on to make that determination — including the location of the body — turned out to be incorrect, but investigators have repeatedly refused to reopen the case.
     
    None of the allegations have been proven in court and the force has yet to file a statement of defence.
     
    The lawsuit is "one of the steps that we have to take now" in the quest for a new investigation, John Connelly said Wednesday in a phone interview from Ottawa.
     
    "I'm sorry it came to this but this lawsuit is really about police accountability and it's really about how oversight deals with policing in the province," he said.
     
    Even if the suit doesn't lead police to revisit the case, it will surely reveal more information about the circumstances surrounding their son's death and the investigation, he said.
     
    The Toronto Police Service did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Kinder Morgan Canada President Doesn't Know If Humans Causing Climate Change

    VANCOUVER — Kinder Morgan Canada president Ian Anderson says he's read the science on both sides and doesn't know whether humans are contributing to climate change.

    Kinder Morgan Canada President Doesn't Know If Humans Causing Climate Change

    Federal Government Aims To Lower Airfares By Bolstering Competition

    Federal Government Aims To Lower Airfares By Bolstering Competition
    MONTREAL — The federal government plans to raise the cap on foreign ownership of Canadian airlines and adopt a passenger bill of rights in a bid to drive down fares and protect travellers faced with airline delays.

    Federal Government Aims To Lower Airfares By Bolstering Competition

    Home Sales In Greater Toronto Area Smash Record, Even As Prices Soar

    Home Sales In Greater Toronto Area Smash Record, Even As Prices Soar
    TORONTO — Home sales in the Greater Toronto Area hit a record high last month even as prices continued to soar, the Toronto Real Estate Board said Thursday.

    Home Sales In Greater Toronto Area Smash Record, Even As Prices Soar

    N.L. Man Who Watched His Father Murder His Mother Wants Stiffer Sentences

    N.L. Man Who Watched His Father Murder His Mother Wants Stiffer Sentences
    Daniel Benoit, 22, said he wants to start a national conversation about murder sentences and Canada's justice system in general, which he says lets convicted murderers off too easily.

    N.L. Man Who Watched His Father Murder His Mother Wants Stiffer Sentences

    Home School Shut Down Amid Allegations Of Misspending Takes Alberta To Court

    Home School Shut Down Amid Allegations Of Misspending Takes Alberta To Court
    Trinity Christian School Association and the Wisdom Home Schooling Society say in a court application that they have done nothing wrong.

    Home School Shut Down Amid Allegations Of Misspending Takes Alberta To Court

    Wrong Address Murder: Judge Finds Man Guilty In Shooting Of Saskatoon Mother

    Wrong Address Murder: Judge Finds Man Guilty In Shooting Of Saskatoon Mother
    Joshua Petrin has also been convicted of conspiracy to commit murder.

    Wrong Address Murder: Judge Finds Man Guilty In Shooting Of Saskatoon Mother