February 27, 2004
Second group launches Ed Horne lawsuit
Lawyers again looking
for "alternative" dispute resolution
JIM BELL
A second group of people who say they suffered from Ed Horne's sexual abuse
while they were students at schools in Sanikiluaq, Kimmirut, Cape Dorset, Iqaluit
and Grise Fiord will seek compensation from the governments of Nunavut and the
Northwest Territories.
Geoffrey Budden, a lawyer based in Mt. Pearl, Nfld., filed a statement of claim
Feb. 5 on behalf of 68 men and one woman at the Nunavut court of justice in
Iqaluit.
Horne, a well-known teacher, principal and education consultant, was convicted
on two occasions of numerous charges involving the molestation of Inuit boys
between 1971 and 1985.
In their lawsuit, the 69 people make the same claims set out by an earlier
group of 85 claimants, who won a $21.5-million settlement from the GN and the
GNWT in October 2002.
As in the first lawsuit, a court order prevents the plaintiffs' names from
being made public.
They allege that territorial government officials failed to protect them from
Horne's sexual abuse, and then failed to provide adequate care after the abuse
was exposed.
They also want money, to compensate them for the damage they've suffered.
Budden said he hopes that issue can be settled in the same manner as the first
lawsuit - through out-of-court, "alternative dispute resolution."
"Alternative dispute resolution" is a process in which both sides
in a dispute work out a friendly deal without having to fight each other in
court.
Budden said each claimant is videotaped and seen by a psychologist, partly
to protect the system against false claims.
"If you were to sit down and see these videotapes, you wouldn't have a
whole lot of doubt," Budden said.
He said the governments of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories won't be surprised
by this second lawsuit. They've known about the likelihood of a second claim
"in a general way" for about a year, Budden said.
In February 1987, Horne received a six-year jail sentence for eight charges
involving 24 boys he molested between 1983 and 1985 in Kimmirut and Cape Dorset.
After Horne served that sentence and left Canada to work in Mexico, another
50 men in Sanikiluaq, Cape Dorset and Iqaluit came forward to disclose that
Horne molested them between 1973 and 1982.
After pleading guilty to another 20 sex offenses Horne received a five-year
jail sentence, imposed Sept. 14, 2000.
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