Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses

The Canadian Press, 22 Dec, 2014 12:13 PM
    VANCOUVER — The lawyer for a man who covertly recorded people using the washroom in his Vancouver restaurant says her client was driven by the thrill of knowing people's secrets, not sexual impulses.
     
    Maegan Richards asked a Vancouver provincial court judge to impose a conditional discharge for Allan Bosomworth, who was the co-owner of Two Chefs and a Table restaurant where he hid a camera in the coed washroom in December 2012.
     
    Crown lawyer Ellen Leno also called for a conditional discharge, but wants Bosomworth to report to a probation officer and not be allowed to possess any device used for capturing recordings or video.
     
    Leno also asked that the man not have any contact with Karl Gregg, his business partner who first discovered the USB-key sized device and found five videos showing men and women using the restaurant's washroom.
     
    Gregg read a victim impact statement to the court, in which he said the incident had affected him financially, socially and emotionally, that he now struggled to trust people and that someone wrote the word "rat" across his front door in red pen in October 2013.
     
    Bosomworth pleaded guilty in September to one count of secretly observing nudity in a private place.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pot still preferred drug in Canadian army, while cocaine gains ground: report

    Pot still preferred drug in Canadian army, while cocaine gains ground: report
    HALIFAX — Marijuana remains the drug of choice for members of the Canadian army, based on the Force's latest blind drug testing report that also found cocaine is gaining popularity among some members.

    Pot still preferred drug in Canadian army, while cocaine gains ground: report

    A look at what went wrong with the Nutrition North food subsidy program

    A look at what went wrong with the Nutrition North food subsidy program
    IQALUIT, Nunavut — For years, northerners have complained about Nutrition North to anyone who would listen, grumbling that the $60-million annual federal food subsidy was doing little to ease their staggering grocery costs.

    A look at what went wrong with the Nutrition North food subsidy program

    Federal polls show race is tightening but can't explain the reasons why

    Federal polls show race is tightening but can't explain the reasons why
    OTTAWA — A spate of public opinion surveys this autumn has prompted the usual end-of-year parsing of political fortunes and chin-stroking prognostications about a federal election that may still be 10 months in the future.

    Federal polls show race is tightening but can't explain the reasons why

    Police say 3-year-old boy struck in face, abandoned at Surrey, B.C., bus stop

    Police say 3-year-old boy struck in face, abandoned at Surrey, B.C., bus stop
    SURREY, B.C. — RCMP say they have made an arrest after receiving reports that a three-year-old boy was struck in the face and abandoned at a bus stop in Surrey, B.C.

    Police say 3-year-old boy struck in face, abandoned at Surrey, B.C., bus stop

    SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault

    SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault
    VANCOUVER — SkyTrain service has been halted between two busy stations in the Metro Vancouver area after what transit officials believe is an electrical fault.

    SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault

    B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand

    B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand
    VANCOUVER — Poultry producers are assuring B.C. residents there will be plenty of turkeys on store shelves during the holidays despite an avian flu outbreak that has killed thousands of animals.

    B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand