Saturday, March 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

Two Senior Canadian Forces Members Charged With Sexual Assaults

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Sep, 2019 10:11 PM

    OTTAWA - Military police have laid sexual-assault charges against two senior members of the Canadian Armed Forces, including a lieutenant-colonel working as a reservist with the Canadian Armed Forces' recruiting group in Ontario.

     

    Lt.-Col. Daniel Mainguy is facing one charge of sexual assault and another of conduct to the prejudice of good order and discipline in relation to what military police allege are two unrelated incidents involving fellow military personnel at Canadian Forces Base Borden.

     

    A 35-year veteran of the military, Mainguy had been working as a marketing and advertising officer in the recruiting group but has been temporarily assigned to another position, according to the Department of National Defence.

     

    Military police have also charged Master Warrant Officer John MacPherson with two counts of sexual assault in relation to two alleged incidents during a military course at CFB Gagetown, N.B., in 1998.

     

    An investigation was launched after the alleged victim of the two incidents filed a complaint in April 2016, according to military police, but it was suspended due to lack of evidence.

     

    Military investigators reopened the file two years later, however, at the request of the alleged victim. New information was subsequently uncovered and charges laid against MacPherson, a regular-force member with the Canadian Army Doctrine and Training Centre in Kingston, Ont.

     

    "The Canadian Forces National Investigation Service seeks to investigate and where appropriate lay charges based on factual evidence regardless of when the offence is alleged to have been committed," said Lt.-Col. Kevin Cadman, commander of the military's investigative unit.

     

    "Much care is taken to investigate all matters of this nature, historical or otherwise."

     

    Both cases are now proceeding through the military-justice system.

     

    The Forces has spent the past four years wrestling with how to eradicate sexual assaults and other inappropriate behaviour by establishing new support services for victims, educating service members and promising severe consequences for perpetrators.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Seats, New School, Announced For Students In Coquitlam, B.C.

    New Seats, New School, Announced For Students In Coquitlam, B.C.
    More than $47 million will be spent for a new elementary school on Coquitlam's Burke Mountain residential area, where Premier John Horgan says development outpaced school growth.

    New Seats, New School, Announced For Students In Coquitlam, B.C.

    Five Hurt, Driver Charged After Fuel Truck Strikes Plane At Pearson Airport

    Five Hurt, Driver Charged After Fuel Truck Strikes Plane At Pearson Airport
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — Five people were taken to hospital with minor injuries and a fuel truck driver was charged after a truck hit a plane on the tarmac at Toronto Pearson airport early Friday morning.    

    Five Hurt, Driver Charged After Fuel Truck Strikes Plane At Pearson Airport

    B.C. Heat Wave Sets 15 Temperature Records Thursday; More Set To Fall

    B.C. Heat Wave Sets 15 Temperature Records Thursday; More Set To Fall
    Fifteen temperature records were broken in British Columbia Thursday and several more could fall Friday as a heat wave settles across the province.

    B.C. Heat Wave Sets 15 Temperature Records Thursday; More Set To Fall

    B.C. Boosts Public Education, Enforcement For Renters And Landlords

    B.C. Boosts Public Education, Enforcement For Renters And Landlords
    British Columbia's government says it's increasing public education and bolstering enforcement to better protect the rights of both renters and landlords.

    B.C. Boosts Public Education, Enforcement For Renters And Landlords

    Wildlife Advocate Questions Decision To Kill Pigeons Pooping On Saskatoon Bridge

    SASKATOON — Crews tasked with cleaning a Saskatchewan bridge are in for a dirty job.

    Wildlife Advocate Questions Decision To Kill Pigeons Pooping On Saskatoon Bridge

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman
    WINNIPEG — The family of an Indigenous woman whose death prosecutors described as worse than any horror movie says there is finally justice now that her killer has been found guilty.    

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman