Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Strip-searched Quebec Girl Can't Return To High School Where It Happened

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Mar, 2015 10:37 AM
    MONTREAL — A teen girl who was strip-searched at a Quebec City high school in a highly publicized case has lost her bid to return to the same institution.
     
    The family's lawyer had sought an injunction, challenging the suspension and allowing her to return to the Neufchatel High School, which had suspended her last month.
     
    Family lawyer Francois-David Bernier said Quebec Superior Court Justice Bernard Godbout rejected the request Monday.
     
    Bernier had argued an urgent need for the 15-year-old girl to return to her old school to save her school year. The school had countered with a spot in a school for students with learning difficulties.
     
    The Capitale school board said in a statement they were very satisfied with the ruling.
     
    "Justice Godbout emphasizes that the transfer of the student in another facility to complete the school year is in her best interest," the school board said.  "The school board quickly put in place the necessary arrangements to support the student in the pursuit of their academic progress and success."
     
    Bernier said in a phone interview late Monday that the girl and her family are disappointed, but will drop the injunction request and abide by the court ruling.
     
    But it's not at all what she wanted, the lawyer said, and the family is keeping a close watch to ensure she doesn't drop out of school.
     
    "They are, for sure, very disappointed," Bernier said. "We have to work to be sure she's finishing her school year."
     
    Bernier said other legal challenges are still pending, including a lawsuit.
     
    The incident last month sparked outrage right across the country after the girl told a local paper she felt violated by the Feb. 12 search after officials suspected her of selling drugs.
     
    The local school board says officials followed government regulations drafted in 2010 when it conducted the search, but the family lawyer countered the school went too far.
     
    The Quebec City school board defended itself, saying it followed guidelines: a student must be searched behind a curtain, the clothes given to a staff member to look over, and the student must never be touched or be seen naked by school officials.
     
    The school principal in question said the girl's clothes were searched and there had been no physical contact.
     
    They found no drugs.
     
    Comments by former education minister Yves Bolduc in the legislature drew the ire of many when he said that a strip search is permitted under "strict" guidelines and in a "respectful" manner when student security is at issue.
     
    But in the days that followed, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said there was "no question" strip searches should not be allowed in Quebec schools, except under extreme circumstances.
     
    The Quebec government has ordered an independent investigation into the incident led by retired lawyer Fabienne Bouchard, who will make recommendations by March 27 on what to do with the strip search guidelines.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two senior editors no longer with Brunswick News Inc. after investigation

    Two senior editors no longer with Brunswick News Inc. after investigation
    MONCTON, N.B. — Two senior editors at a New Brunswick newspaper are no longer with the company after an internal ethics probe alleged one of them visited a government-owned fishing lodge and both tried to alter a guest list to remove his name before it was made public, the ombudswoman for the chain of papers owned by Brunswick News Inc. says.

    Two senior editors no longer with Brunswick News Inc. after investigation

    Saskatchewan names geographic features to honour those who gave lives in service

    Saskatchewan names geographic features to honour those who gave lives in service
    REGINA — Three lakes in northern Saskatchewan have been named after soldiers from the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry who died in Afghanistan.

    Saskatchewan names geographic features to honour those who gave lives in service

    Despite sore joints, aching muscles, hockey players set new record for longest game

    Despite sore joints, aching muscles, hockey players set new record for longest game
    EDMONTON — A group of sore, exhausted but happy players in the Edmonton region have set a new unofficial record for the world's longest hockey game.

    Despite sore joints, aching muscles, hockey players set new record for longest game

    Deported Indian Man Sues Over 'Miscarriage Of Justice' In Wrongful Sex-Assault Conviction

    Deported Indian Man Sues Over 'Miscarriage Of Justice' In Wrongful Sex-Assault Conviction
    Gurdev Singh Dhillon was convicted of sexual assault in 2005, imprisoned and deported to India in 2008. But a special prosecutor found Crown counsel didn't disclose DNA evidence that pointed to three other men — something the B.C. Appeal Court cited when it threw out the conviction last year.

    Deported Indian Man Sues Over 'Miscarriage Of Justice' In Wrongful Sex-Assault Conviction

    Hawksworth Scholarship Young Chefs Competition Seeks Entrants

    Hawksworth Scholarship Young Chefs Competition Seeks Entrants
    VANCOUVER — Applications are being accepted for young Canadian chefs looking to win $10,000 in a national culinary competition.

    Hawksworth Scholarship Young Chefs Competition Seeks Entrants

    Two Suspects In Custody After Early Morning Stabbing In Downtown Vancouver

    Two Suspects In Custody After Early Morning Stabbing In Downtown Vancouver
    Vancouver Police Const. Brian Montague says a man was stabbed at about 3:40 a.m. on Granville Street near Davie Street.

    Two Suspects In Custody After Early Morning Stabbing In Downtown Vancouver