July 1, 2005
Slap on the face nets slap on the wrist
No criminal record for teacher accused of slapping foster child
GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS
A former school teacher has escaped a potential criminal record, despite being
found guilty of repeatedly slapping and punching her foster child in Cambridge
Bay.
Justice Earl Johnson gave the woman a conditional discharge during a hearing
on June 24 at the Nunavut Court of Justice in Iqaluit.
The woman cannot be identified under a court-ordered publication ban protecting
the identity of her former foster child.
The discharge means the 50-year-old woman can avoid carrying a criminal record
that would have prevented her from continuing to work in education. Instead,
she must stick to the rules of a six-month probation.
The woman, originally from Nova Scotia, has taught school children for more
than three decades. She taught the 13-year-old Inuk girl before taking her as
a foster child two years ago.
In his written verdict, Justice Johnson had to choose whether he believed the
foster child or the woman, who denied hitting the girl more than once.
When social workers investigated in June 2003, the girl stuck with her foster
mother's version of events - there had only been one slap, one time. The social
workers considered the incident to be within a parent's rights within the law.
But the girl later changed her story, and said the woman actually hit her multiple
times on several occasions, once hard enough to break her glasses.
A social worker said in court that the attacks were likely brought on by the
foster mother's "perfectionism" and frustration with the girl's perpetual
lying.
The girl said she lied to the social workers, at first, because her foster
mother asked her to cover up the multiple attacks, and promised to stop hitting
her.
The woman's defence lawyer, Euan Mackay, claimed the girl fabricated the beatings
to convince social workers to send her back to her previous foster mother.
Johnson said the girl was more credible than her foster mother, who he found
"aggressive" and angry towards the child.
Johnson noted the teenager admitted she had a bad temper and a habit of lying,
even though the confession could have hurt her case.
But Johnson said he was impressed by the girl's consistent testimony, and the
compliments she received from her Grade 8 teacher, who described the girl as
her best behaved and brightest student.
Before her sentencing, the woman apologized, but didn't retract any of her
claims.
"I truly tried to the best of my abilities to do the right thing,"
she said on a speaker phone from Pangnirtung. "Everything I did, I did
with the belief
that I was helping her."
Until now, the woman was working as an early childhood worker in Pangnirtung,
for Nunavut's department of health and social services.
But she lost her job and housing, as a result of the conviction, marked by
an eviction notice delivered by the government of Nunavut, last week.
At the time of the trial, the girl had been returned to her former foster parent
in Cambridge Bay.
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