Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vulnerable Witnesses To Get Support From Crown Years After Pickton Dodged Trial

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2015 01:50 PM
    VANCOUVER — The failure of Crown prosecutors to press a drug-addicted woman nearly murdered by Robert Pickton to testify against the serial killer has inspired new policy to support vulnerable witnesses.
     
    B.C.'s criminal justice branch has implemented a series of new regulations that will help victims participate in criminal prosecutions, fulfilling a key recommendation made by the public inquiry looking into Vancouver's missing women. 
     
    A 1997 trial against Pickton that may have stopped his killing rampage years earlier was called off when the Crown decided the woman he attacked was unreliable as a witness because she was a heroin addict.
     
    The new policy recognizes that for cases involving allegations of serious personal injury, vulnerable victims require ongoing support and their participation in the justice system needs to be encouraged.
     
    Missing women inquiry commissioner Wally Oppal says the new policy is right on, noting a major downfall in the Pickton case was that women distrusted police and that meant authorities sometimes missed crucial information.
     
    Pickton was originally charged with killing 26 women, most of them from Vancouver's impoverished Downtown Eastside, but the remaining charges were stayed when he was convicted of killing six women. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Five Powerful Earthquakes Strike Off The Coast Of B.C. Over The Weekend

    Five Powerful Earthquakes Strike Off The Coast Of B.C. Over The Weekend
    A series of powerful earthquakes shook the coast of B.C. over the weekend. The federal agency that monitors earthquakes in Canada says there were five offshore quakes on Saturday and Sunday.

    Five Powerful Earthquakes Strike Off The Coast Of B.C. Over The Weekend

    TTC speeds up review of bus and streetcar operators after teen's death

    TTC speeds up review of bus and streetcar operators after teen's death
    Toronto's transit authority will be speeding up its review of bus and streetcar operators following the death of a 14-year-old girl who was killed after being hit by a city bus.

    TTC speeds up review of bus and streetcar operators after teen's death

    Vancouver MLA Mable Elmore Seeking Ndp Nomination For Federal Riding

    Vancouver MLA Mable Elmore Seeking Ndp Nomination For Federal Riding
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver MLA is seeking the NDP nomination for the federal riding of Vancouver East. Mable Elmore currently represents the riding of Vancouver-Kensington for the provincial New Democrats.

    Vancouver MLA Mable Elmore Seeking Ndp Nomination For Federal Riding

    Study Involving UBC Scientist Says Chinook Salmon Could Be Wiped Out By 2100

    Study Involving UBC Scientist Says Chinook Salmon Could Be Wiped Out By 2100
    VANCOUVER — New climate-change research involving a University of British Columbia scientist predicts that one of the West Coast's most prized salmon stocks could be wiped out over the next 85 years.

    Study Involving UBC Scientist Says Chinook Salmon Could Be Wiped Out By 2100

    Former Vancouver Stealth Head Coach Chris Hall Dies Of Cancer At 64

    Former Vancouver Stealth Head Coach Chris Hall Dies Of Cancer At 64
    VANCOUVER — Chris (C.H.) Hall, former head coach of the National Lacrosse League's Vancouver Stealth, has died after a four-year battle with cancer.

    Former Vancouver Stealth Head Coach Chris Hall Dies Of Cancer At 64

    Canada faces new Cold War in Europe and hot war against ISIL in Iraq in 2015

    Canada faces new Cold War in Europe and hot war against ISIL in Iraq in 2015
    OTTAWA — It could very well be that 2014 is remembered as the year when Canada traded one shadow war for possibly two others.

    Canada faces new Cold War in Europe and hot war against ISIL in Iraq in 2015