Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Private Schools Should Have Procedures In Place To Report Crimes: Police

The Canadian Press, 20 Nov, 2018 12:17 PM
     
    TORONTO — A high-ranking Toronto police officer investigating allegations of assault and sexual assault at St. Michael's College School says private schools should establish rules for reporting crimes to authorities similar to the ones all public schools have in place.
     
     
    Insp. Domenic Sinopoli, head of the sex crimes unit, says all public school boards in the city have signed protocols with the Toronto police that spell out the institutions' responsibilities and the response to incidents where police involvement is required.
     
     
    He says private schools such as St. Michael's, an all-boys' institution that teaches grades 7 to 12, do not have such agreements with police.
     
     
    The Roman Catholic school has been at the centre of a police investigation into at least six incidents involving allegations of assault and sexual assault — some captured on video.
     
     
    Six students from the school were arrested on Monday and charged with assault, gang sexual assault and sexual assault with a weapon in connection with one of the incidents.
     
     
    St. Michael's failure to promptly report the incidents to police has raised questions about how private schools handle such incidents and whether more government oversight is needed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Women In B.C. To Have Access To Breast Density Info When Screened For Cancer

    Women In B.C. To Have Access To Breast Density Info When Screened For Cancer
    VANCOUER, B.C. — Women in British Columbia will soon get breast density information after having a mammogram, which can lead to the screening test missing cancer.

    Women In B.C. To Have Access To Breast Density Info When Screened For Cancer

    B.C. Premier Apologizes For Removal Of 1950S Totem Pole At Canada-U.S. Border

    B.C. Premier Apologizes For Removal Of 1950S Totem Pole At Canada-U.S. Border
    SURREY, B.C. — Three First Nations in British Columbia gathered today to raise a restored replica totem pole at a Canada-U.S. border crossing — a decade after it was removed by the province without notice.

    B.C. Premier Apologizes For Removal Of 1950S Totem Pole At Canada-U.S. Border

    Nanaimo Tent City Ordered To Shut Down Within 21 Days

    Nanaimo Tent City Ordered To Shut Down Within 21 Days
    NANAIMO, B.C. — A British Columbia Supreme Court judge has given people living in a tent city in Nanaimo 21 days to vacate land owned by the municipality.

    Nanaimo Tent City Ordered To Shut Down Within 21 Days

    Dozens Of Dead And Dying Birds Plummet From The Sky In Metro Vancouver

    Dozens Of Dead And Dying Birds Plummet From The Sky In Metro Vancouver
    DELTA, B.C. — A British Columbia man who witnessed dozens of birds falling from the sky just south of Vancouver says he was horrified by the sight.

    Dozens Of Dead And Dying Birds Plummet From The Sky In Metro Vancouver

    Carjacker Who Used Pepper Spray, Struck Pedestrian Arrested In Vancouver: Police

    Police say a pedestrian was seriously injured Friday morning in downtown Vancouver after a carjacking that ended with the arrest of a suspect and multiple collisions.

    Carjacker Who Used Pepper Spray, Struck Pedestrian Arrested In Vancouver: Police

    Vancouver Councillors Move Ahead With Policy For Duplexes On Detached Home Lots

    Vancouver Councillors Move Ahead With Policy For Duplexes On Detached Home Lots
    Vancouver councillors have ended two days of public hearings by voting to allow duplexes in most city neighbourhoods currently restricted to single-family homes.

    Vancouver Councillors Move Ahead With Policy For Duplexes On Detached Home Lots