July 21, 2006
Acquitted woman to
sue GN for wrongful dismissal
Correctional centre
head fired after assault accusations
JOHN
THOMPSON
A Kugluktuk woman plans
to launch a wrongful dismissal suit against the Government of Nunavut, following
her acquittal in February of this year on a charge of assault causing bodily
harm.
Helen Larocque, former
director of the Illuvut correctional healing centre, lost her job after she
and her sister were accused of entering the home of Pauline Bolt and assaulting
the woman.
Bolt told the court that
on the morning of July 3, 2005, the two sisters woke her up in her home, dragged
her off the living room couch, repeatedly punched her in the face and pushed
a 27-inch television off a table and on to her.
Bolt, a sister-in-law of
Larocque and Pigalak, was treated in the Kugluktuk Health Centre and later medevaced
to Stanton Hospital in Yellowknife, where she spent the next five days recovering
from injuries that included a ruptured eardrum and bruised chest and hip.
But details of her testimony
didnt match other evidence heard in court, while alcohol-induced blackouts
left other holes in her story.
Justice Robert Kilpatrick
said there was enough evidence to convict Larocque of aiding and abetting her
sister, who pleaded guilty to assault.
But he said that evidence
could not be considered dependable creating reasonable doubt, and leading
him to find Larocque not guilty.
This is the criminal
standard I must apply. I cant be guessing. There are limits to what a
judge can do in arriving at a decision. I was not there. But on the basis of
the evidence before me, I can only say that it would be dangerous on my part
to convict on the strength of the complainants evidence, Kilpatrick
said.
Given the inconsistencies
of the evidence, the gaps in her recollection, I cannot say that I am satisfied
on the issue of credibility.
The trouble started on
the evening of July 2 when Bolt found her spouse, the brother of Laroque and
Pigalak, sleeping with another woman, Bolt told the court.
Enraged, she brawled with
the other woman, then went to the house of Laroques and Pigalaks
father later that evening and threw rocks through the window.
Then she returned home
with her friends and continued drinking before falling asleep in the early morning.
Then the two sisters arrived,
joined by Leila Uttak.
According to Bolt, they
arrived on ATVs, wearing helmets. Bolt said the women pulled her off the couch
by her shirt, shouted at her, punched and slapped her, then, while Pigalak held
her down, Laroque tipped the television onto Bolts side.
Pigalak later told the
court she did punch Bolt in the face, but said Laroque was not involved in the
attack.
Bolt acknowledged that
she has gaps in her memory caused by the vodka and rum she drank the previous
evening. When she arrived in Yellowknife, her blood-alcohol level was 210 milligrams
well over the legal limit.
Uttak and Pigalak each
told the court stories that were different than Bolts, beginning with
their riding to Bolts home inside Laroques white pickup truck, rather
than on ATVs. Both maintained the television was never pushed onto Bolt.
No television lay on the
floor when police arrived. Bolt told the court she picked it up before police
arrived.
Bolt first mentioned the
fallen television to a doctor in Yellowknife. The statement Bolt made to police
said that a television landed on her head, which she later changed to landing
on her hip.
Another inconsistency in
the police statement given by Bolt stated that she awoke naked, rather than
dressed, as she told the court.
It remains unclear whether
some of Bolts injuries, such as the ruptured eardrum, arouse from fighting
earlier the previous evening, and from previous injuries.
Laroques sister,
Rita Pigalak, pleaded guilty to assaulting Bolt. She is serving a conditional
sentence of six months.
During cross-examination
at Laroques trial, Crown lawyer Michael Jones asked Pigalak if she was
taking the fall to save her sisters reputation and job.
No, Im not
trying to cover up (for) Helen at all. I believe that God always want us to
tell the truth, and were telling the truth, Pigalak replied.
Larocque has retained the
services of Steven Cooper of Ahlstrom Wright Oliver & Cooper, an Edmonton-based
law firm, to sue the GN for wrongful dismissal.
The GN must understand
that its actions are governed by law and due process, Cooper said in a
press release.
Care must be taken
before drastic decisions are made including one to dismiss a senior employee,
which not only impacts on the employees bank account but also their reputation.
Bank accounts can be refilled; reputations not so easily.
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