Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Verdict Set For Dec. 20 In Case Of B.C. Ex-Mountie Charged With Sexual Assault

The Canadian Press, 01 Dec, 2017 09:50 PM
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia judge is expected to release his verdict on Dec. 20 in the case of a retired RCMP inspector charged with sexually assaulting a civilian employee in the workplace.
     
     
    Fifty-two-year-old Tim Shields, who was a high-profile spokesman for the RCMP in B.C., has pleaded not guilty to one count of sexual assault.
     
     
    The provincial court trial heard the assault was alleged to have occurred in 2009 in a ground-floor washroom of the force's British Columbia headquarters.
     
     
    The complainant, who cannot be identified because of a publication ban, testified that Shields led her to a unisex washroom before kissing and groping her.
     
     
    Shields told the trial the woman enthusiastically participated in sex acts and then accused him of sexual assault.
     
     
    He was charged in May 2016, five months after he retired following a suspension in the middle of a code of conduct investigation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Park Board To Mull Motion Seeking Ban On Use Or Display Of Balloons

    Vancouver Park Board To Mull Motion Seeking Ban On Use Or Display Of Balloons
    VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Park Board is being asked to consider sticking a pin in the presence of latex and plastic balloons in city parks.

    Vancouver Park Board To Mull Motion Seeking Ban On Use Or Display Of Balloons

    Crown Says Montreal Couple Was Intent On Waging Jihad In The Middle East

    Crown Says Montreal Couple Was Intent On Waging Jihad In The Middle East
    MONTREAL — The Crown says a young Montreal couple was intent on answering the call from Islamic State to wage jihad in the Middle East and had amassed bomb-making materials at their home.

    Crown Says Montreal Couple Was Intent On Waging Jihad In The Middle East

    Green Factor Explains Disappearance Of Big-ticket Promises In B.C. Budget: Carole James

    Green Factor Explains Disappearance Of Big-ticket Promises In B.C. Budget: Carole James
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's three-member Green party was a factor behind the absence of big-ticket election promises in the minority NDP government's first budget update, Finance Minister Carole James says.

    Green Factor Explains Disappearance Of Big-ticket Promises In B.C. Budget: Carole James

    Chief Privacy Officer 'Pleased' With B.C. Auto Insurer's Info-Sharing Practices

    Chief Privacy Officer 'Pleased' With B.C. Auto Insurer's Info-Sharing Practices
    VANCOUVER — An audit by British Columbia's privacy commissioner has found the information-sharing practices of B.C.'s public auto insurer are, for the most part, "reasonable and proportionate."

    Chief Privacy Officer 'Pleased' With B.C. Auto Insurer's Info-Sharing Practices

    Nova Scotia Mountie Killed After Stopping To Change Motorists' Tire In N.B.

    Nova Scotia Mountie Killed After Stopping To Change Motorists' Tire In N.B.
    MEMRAMCOOK, N.B. — A Nova Scotia Mountie who apparently stopped to assist motorists with a flat tire has been killed in a collision in southeastern New Brunswick.

    Nova Scotia Mountie Killed After Stopping To Change Motorists' Tire In N.B.

    Justin Trudeau Peppered On Issues Likely To Plague Him When Parliament Resumes

    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Justin Trudeau has wrapped up a cabinet retreat on the defensive over a number of issues that are likely to plague his government when Parliament resumes next week.

    Justin Trudeau Peppered On Issues Likely To Plague Him When Parliament Resumes