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Police say a West Kent parent believed a 2023 school touching incident had been reported to them. It hadn't.
Police say a West Kent parent believed a 2023 school touching incident had been reported to them. It hadn't.

CBC

time12-05-2025

  • CBC

Police say a West Kent parent believed a 2023 school touching incident had been reported to them. It hadn't.

Social Sharing WARNING: This story contains disturbing descriptions of child sex abuse. Resources and supports for anyone who has experienced sexual violence can be found at the bottom of this story. Investigators with Charlottetown Police Services say they didn't learn about an alleged 2023 touching incident involving Matthew Craswell at West Kent Elementary School until one of the girls' parents brought it to them 14 months later. Det.-Sgt. Darren MacDougall told CBC News in an email that a parent came to Charlottetown police in August 2024 "inquiring about the status of an investigation involving her daughter of inappropriate touching by a teacher at her school." MacDougall's email continued: "The parent reported the incident to the school in June 2023 and assumed the school engaged police. However, police were not informed of the incident." Last month, Craswell pleaded guilty to sexually touching a student at Glen Stewart Primary School in Stratford in April 2024 while he was a substitute teacher, as well as three unrelated child pornography offences. Through court proceedings and the aftermath of details being made public, more has been revealed about another alleged incident at West Kent Elementary School in June 2023. Craswell was not charged in relation to those allegations, so the issue has not been tested in court, unlike the Glen Stewart incident involving Craswell. However, court documents show the P.E.I. substitute teacher had "boasted of his misconduct with other children" throughout thousands of pages of online chats accessed by RCMP after Craswell's devices were seized. "During one conversation, [Craswell] alludes to sexually touching three other girls while teaching them," said the court documents, presented at the time of his guilty pleas. No interviews, no charges Little is known about the 2023 events or specific allegations, or what would have led the West Kent parent to believe the school would have involved police. But documents have shown the P.E.I. substitute teacher "boasted of his misconduct with other children" throughout thousands of pages of online chats accessed by RCMP after seizing Craswell's devices. "During one conversation, [Craswell] alludes to sexually touching three other girls while teaching them," said the court documents presented at the time of his guilty pleas. Substitute teacher's sexual touching in classroom 'should not have happened,' P.E.I. Premier says 12 days ago Duration 3:32 The premier of Prince Edward Island is apologizing after a former substitute teacher pleaded guilty to sexually touching a young student. Rob Lantz committed to reviewing the Public Schools Branch's reporting procedures for situations like these. CBC's Nicola MacLeod explains. Last fall, Charlottetown Police circled back with the three girls' parents after learning more about that 2023 incident from Craswell's online activity. The parents all ultimately decided not to allow their children to participate in police interviews. "The willingness of the victim(s) to provide a statement and engage the criminal justice system is required to proceed with an investigation and/or charges," MacDougall wrote. Teaching licence has been revoked CBC News reached out to the Public Schools Branch for comment on Monday, but did not receive a response by deadline. However, the P.E.I. Department of Education and Early Years sent a statement on Monday that suggested Craswell is unlikely to ever teach again. "The individual's teaching licence has been revoked. All Canadian registrars and Island schools, including CSLF [the French-language school board on P.E.I.], PSB, private schools and John J. Sark Memorial School [on Lennox Island First Nation] will be notified once the decision has been finalized," it said. "Given the nature of this individual's offences, he would not be successful in an appeal of their licence, pass future vulnerable sector checks and will not be eligible to hold a teaching licence in the future." If your children ask about P.E.I. case involving a substitute teacher, this psychologist has advice 11 days ago Duration 6:41 Disturbing details have been emerging from a recent court case involving a substitute teacher who pleaded guilty this week to sexual touching at a P.E.I. primary school. To help us navigate how to handle conversations about this, especially with young children, CBC News: Compass spoke with a psychologist, Dr. Jacqueline Roche. Finding of 'no malicious intent' on Craswell's part The Public Schools Branch has said both the 2023 and 2024 incidents involving Craswell were reported to the respective schools and investigated internally. The PSB has not confirmed the 2023 incident was at West Kent, but the Education Minister revealed that detail in the legislature on Friday. In both cases, the PSB has said Craswell touched the female students on the girls' stomachs or arms during classroom games. Public Schools Branch Director Tracy Beaulieu tells the CBC's Nicola MacLeod what steps were taken when Matthew Craswell's inappropriate touching of students was brought forward, and why officials did not feel the need to contact police. Police and Child Protection Services were not notified at the time of either allegation. The branch said this is because there was no evidence at that time to suggest Craswell had malicious or criminal intent. In an interview last week, CBC News asked director Tracy Beaulieu who had determined that police and child protection officials did not need to be involved. "Those decisions would have been made based on the statement of facts at the time about whether there was an intent and harm directed at students," she replied. "From what I have been informed, there was no intent — or malicious intent — behind it and that's why there would not have been a call. "Given the information that we have now, had they had that information at that time, I can assure you that there would have been different decisions made." The internal investigators who assessed the 2024 Glen Stewart incident also did not know about the 2023 incident at West Kent. The PSB said that's because there wasn't a centralized tracking system to register staff complaints. One has since been implemented. There are resources and supports available to anyone who has experienced sexual violence:

Substitute's touching kids at P.E.I. schools not believed to be sexual at the time, says PSB
Substitute's touching kids at P.E.I. schools not believed to be sexual at the time, says PSB

CBC

time09-05-2025

  • CBC

Substitute's touching kids at P.E.I. schools not believed to be sexual at the time, says PSB

Court documents revealed Craswell continued teaching after incidents reported WARNING: This story contains disturbing descriptions of child sex abuse. Resources and supports for anyone who has experienced sexual violence can be found at the bottom of this story. Two incidents of substitute teacher Matthew Alan Craswell inappropriately touching students at different P.E.I. elementary schools "were believed to be non-sexual in nature" at the time, the province's Public Schools Branch said in an email to parents late Thursday evening. "These incidents were reported by different elementary schools about eight months apart (June 2023 and April 2024) and occurred during classroom games. The students involved reported Craswell touching them on their arms and stomach," reads the letter from PSB director Tracy Beaulieu. "Following the investigations, and based on the information available at that time, these incidents were believed to be non-sexual in nature.... With the new information revealed during the court proceedings, it is now clear that the incidents were sexual in nature, contrary to what was initially believed." The PSB later clarified the two incidents were investigated separately, and the people who looked into the 2024 case didn't know about the 2023 incident. The email addressed to all parents and guardians comes after it was revealed in court this week that Craswell continued working after sexually touching a student at Glen Stewart Primary School in Stratford, P.E.I. The court documents revealed Craswell bragged about his sexually abusive behaviour online and wrote about sexually touching three other girls while teaching them. We all have every right to be disturbed and heartbroken. Our commitment to you is to ensure our processes are improved to keep your children safe, and to maintain open and transparent communication. — Letter from PSB director Tracy Beaulieu The PSB told CBC News that no one was available for an interview Friday, and it was instead focusing on parents and staff. According to the agreed statement of facts, Craswell boasted about touching a child's nipples, saying, "I could just tell that if she was mine or I got to see her often, like a babysitting situation or something, that things would go very far and she'd be into it. As long as I went slow." Craswell admitted to touching the child "and that the purpose of that touching was sexual," according to the documents. 'Disturbed and heartbroken' Craswell, 40, was first charged last summer with possession and distribution of child pornography after the U.S.-based National Center for Missing and Exploited Children flagged his internet activity. New information came to light during the RCMP investigation, details of which were shared in court Tuesday as Craswell pleaded guilty to four charges related to child sex abuse images and the incident where he sexually touched a young girl in a classroom in front of other students. The court documents indicate school officials were made aware of that incident but it was not reported to police and Craswell continued to work in schools with older children after the Public Schools Branch was informed. Few details about the June 2023 incident have been made public. The PSB confirmed in its letter it was a different school than Glen Stewart Primary. Multiple sources have told CBC News it took place at a Charlottetown school. The court documents indicate that investigation didn't continue because the parents didn't want their children to be interviewed by police. In its email to parents on Thursday, the PSB confirmed that Craswell worked off and on, primarily in high schools, until the end of the 2023-24 school year. He was suspended from teaching at all schools in the province after he was arrested on Aug. 9 on child pornography charges. Those charges are not related to the incidents that took place at P.E.I. schools. If an extradition request is received by Canada from a foreign state, it is considered a confidential state-to-state communication, and the Department of Justice would not discuss it. — Federal Department of Justice All the schools where Craswell had worked were contacted after his arrest, according to the email, and the PSB said it isn't aware of any other incidents. "Like you, we are deeply upset and concerned about the information that has come out through the legal process involving former substitute teacher Matthew Craswell. Through the court proceedings, we are learning the whole truth about his horrible actions," the email reads. "We all have every right to be disturbed and heartbroken. Our commitment to you is to ensure our processes are improved to keep your children safe, and to maintain open and transparent communication." Extradition requests considered confidential The court documents also revealed that Craswell was the subject of an extradition request from South Korea in relation to allegations that he had committed a voyeurism offence when living there in September of 2018. Craswell would have been required to pass a vulnerable sector check before he began working with the PSB and then every two years after that. The RCMP have said the allegation from officials in South Korea likely would not have come up. In an email to CBC News late Thursday evening, the federal Department of Justice said an extradition request would be considered "a confidential state-to-state communication" and the department could neither confirm or deny the existence of an extradition request unless the request itself was making its way through the courts. WATCH | Premier says sexual touching in classroom 'should not have happened': Media Video | Substitute teacher's sexual touching in classroom 'should not have happened,' P.E.I. Premier says Caption: The premier of Prince Edward Island is apologizing after a former substitute teacher pleaded guilty to sexually touching a young student. Rob Lantz committed to reviewing the Public Schools Branch's reporting procedures for situations like these. CBC's Nicola MacLeod explains. Open Full Embed in New Tab Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage than loading CBC Lite story pages. It remains unclear whether this is information that could have come up on a vulnerable sector check completed in Prince Edward Island. Court documents show P.E.I. RCMP had access to the information when preparing a search warrant for Craswell's parents' Cornwall home in July of 2024. On Thursday, the PSB said it plans to push for the RCMP and other policing services to expand vulnerable sector checks to include inter-provincial and international records — including, but not limited to, extradition orders. "Based on what we know now, Matthew Craswell should never have passed his background check." Central tracking system On Thursday, the PSB also announced it had implemented a province-wide tracking system of incidents and reports of misconduct at Island schools. Previously, there had been no centralized monitoring of reported incidents. It also remains unclear if the PSB had connected the June 2023 and April 2024 incidents prior to Craswell's guilty pleas this week. "Schools are meant to be safe spaces for all students to learn, and this situation has shaken the faith of many in our communities that we can deliver on that promise. Every student has the right to a safe environment while they learn at our schools. And the fact that even one student was placed in a situation that made them uncomfortable and that was inappropriate, breaks our hearts," the email read. "Our staff pride themselves on working with students to help them become well-equipped for a successful future in our communities. Changing the system takes time but we will work tirelessly to rebuild your trust in us to protect, teach, and guide your children." WATCH | Premier apologizes after former substitute pleads guilty: Media Video | P.E.I. premier apologizes after former substitute pleads guilty to sexual touching at primary school Caption: Premier Rob Lantz told the P.E.I. Legislature on Wednesday that he was 'profoundly sorry' in response to a question about Matthew Alan Craswell, who worked as a substitute teacher as recently as last year, before being arrested on charges related to child sex abuse images and an incident where he sexually touched a girl in a classroom in front of other students. Watch the legislative exchange including the apology here. Open Full Embed in New Tab Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage than loading CBC Lite story pages. The Craswell case came up in the legislature for the third consecutive day on Friday. Premier Rob Lantz, who took office in February and previously served as education minister beginning in October 2024, reiterated a promise to launch an independent investigation into how Craswell was allowed to continue teaching. The premier's office also sent a statement about the matter to CBC News late Friday afternoon. There has been considerable public attention and concern regarding the circumstances of the Craswell case, and it is important that Islanders have clarity on the steps being taken. — Statement from Premier Rob Lantz's office "There has been considerable public attention and concern regarding the circumstances of the Craswell case, and it is important that Islanders have clarity on the steps being taken," it said. "An independent review will be conducted to examine what occurred, including an audit of the complaints and records process, and determine what must be done to prevent a situation like this from happening again. The review will identify where systems failed and include recommendations to strengthen them. Government is committed to implementing those recommendations. "The review and its recommendations will be made public." The province also announced it had implemented mandatory training around preventing sexual abuse for teachers and others who work with kids in the school system last month, before the court documents were released.

2023 touching incident involving Craswell was at West Kent School, education minister says
2023 touching incident involving Craswell was at West Kent School, education minister says

CBC

time09-05-2025

  • CBC

2023 touching incident involving Craswell was at West Kent School, education minister says

No charges filed in connection with complaint and facts of matter not proven in court Image | Swing at West Kent on P.E.I. Caption: West Kent Elementary School, shown in a 2021 file photo, was the scene of allegations involving Matthew Craswell in June 2023, P.E.I.'s education minister told the legislature Friday. (Jane Robertson/CBC) P.E.I.'s education minister has confirmed a 2023 school touching incident involving Matthew Craswell, which was internally investigated and deemed not to be sexual, occurred at West Kent Elementary School in Charlottetown. Minister of Education and Early Years Robin Croucher revealed that detail in the legislature on Friday. CBC News had previously established that the 2023 incident happened at a Charlottetown-area school, based on information from sources. The Public Schools Branch would not confirm whether was West Kent, citing privacy concerns. On Thursday, Croucher was asked in the legislature to specify which Charlottetown school was involved in the situation. He said he would bring back an answer when he was sure he could legally do so. "The second school that Matthew Craswell taught at was West Kent Elementary," he told the house on Friday. On April 29, Craswell pleaded guilty to sexually touching a student at Glen Stewart Primary School in Stratford, just east of Charlottetown, in April 2024. He also pleaded guilty to three unrelated child pornography charges. It was during that court proceeding that a previous incident of touching involving a school, for which Craswell was never charged, was revealed publicly for the first time. Media Video | Substitute teacher's sexual touching in classroom 'should not have happened,' P.E.I. Premier says Caption: The premier of Prince Edward Island is apologizing after a former substitute teacher pleaded guilty to sexually touching a young student. Rob Lantz committed to reviewing the Public Schools Branch's reporting procedures for situations like these. CBC's Nicola MacLeod explains. Open Full Embed in New Tab Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage than loading CBC Lite story pages. "The Public Schools Branch will be as transparent as we can be to the broader public, but we are also constrained by legal and privacy obligations," the organization said in a statement to CBC News Friday afternoon. The PSB had previously said the incidents at both schools "occurred during classroom games. The students involved reported Craswell touching them on their arms and stomach." What is known about the alleged incident That 2023 situation was known to investigators who analyzed Craswell's digital records in the fall of 2024, scouring thousands of pages of Craswell's online chats. "During one conversation, [Craswell] alludes to sexually touching three other girls while teaching them," said the court documents presented at the time of his guilty pleas. "This matter was investigated and the children's parents ultimately declined to allow them to participate in police interviews," said the court document. Media Video | If your children ask about P.E.I. case involving a substitute teacher, this psychologist has advice Caption: Disturbing details have been emerging from a recent court case involving a substitute teacher who pleaded guilty this week to sexual touching at a P.E.I. primary school. To help us navigate how to handle conversations about this, especially with young children, CBC News: Compass spoke with a psychologist, Dr. Jacqueline Roche. Open Full Embed in New Tab Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage than loading CBC Lite story pages. Police investigations typically do not proceed unless the people involved are interviewed. Craswell was never charged for the West Kent incident, and it has not been tested in court. The PSB has said this situation, like the Glen Stewart incident, was investigated internally and deemed not be sexual in nature, so police and Child Protection were not called at the time. PSB Director Tracy Beaulieu told CBC News that the incident was brought to light for the organization and connected to the Glen Stewart investigation only when Craswell was charged in August of 2024 — 14 months after the incident at West Kent. The West Kent principal in June of 2023 was Tracy Ellsworth, who died in 2024. "We take all complaints very seriously," the PSB said in its statement Friday, adding that the April 29 court proceedings and the agreed statement of facts in the case "have further revealed more information regarding Craswell's motivations that were not revealed at the time of the reports to schools." It added: "We can also confirm that no new incidents have been reported to the Public Schools Branch since his arrest in August 2024 or the court proceedings on April 29th. "Our greatest priority is the well-being of our students and families. We want all Island families to know that there are supports in place and, if children are upset by the stories they are hearing in the news or other media, we can help them. Please reach out." Safety is main priority, minister says "What has been done to protect the safety of children at West Kent School?" Liberal MLA Gordon McNeilly asked in the legislature moments after Croucher identified the second school Friday. Croucher repeated what he's been saying in the house for days: The PSB has a new centralized tracking system for staff incidents and the department has implemented new mandatory training for educators and those who work with children in schools. "Everyone is taking this seriously, okay? Everyone on this side of the House. Everyone in our system. Everyone is hypervigilant right now," Croucher responded. "Our main priority is the safety of the children in our system." There are resources and supports available to anyone who has experienced sexual violence:

PSB says it only connected Craswell incidents in P.E.I. schools after his 1st arrest
PSB says it only connected Craswell incidents in P.E.I. schools after his 1st arrest

CBC

time07-05-2025

  • CBC

PSB says it only connected Craswell incidents in P.E.I. schools after his 1st arrest

Social Sharing The director of P.E.I.'s Public Schools Branch says the organization only connected two classroom incidents involving Matthew Alan Craswell after he was arrested on unrelated child pornography charges last summer. Tracy Beaulieu sat down with CBC News for an interview Tuesday for the first time since Craswell pleaded guilty to sexual touching at Stratford's Glen Stewart Primary, as well as child pornography offences, last week. "Once we found out about the charges that were in place for Mr. Craswell, we went and looked into our records to see, was there anything that we had? And it did unfold that there was an investigation done in April [2024]," Beaulieu told CBC News. "At that moment in time we thought 'we need to notify police.'" Craswell, 40, originally faced only child pornography charges related to possession and distribution after he used the messaging app Kik to send images depicting child sex abuse that were flagged by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in the United States. CBC News reached out to the PSB at that time to confirm that the Matthew Craswell who was charged was the same one who was advertising himself online as a P.E.I. substitute teacher. The charges related to the Glen Stewart incident were laid in the following days. "There was another incident that came up and we realized we need a centralized tracking system," Beaulieu said. "If the information would have been in a centralized location, we might have identified trends in that and looked at things a little bit differently." Both investigations ruled out sexual motive The first report known to CBC of Craswell's behaviour was at a school in June 2023. Little is known about this event, but sources told CBC News it happened at a Charlottetown-area elementary school. Beaulieu said the incident was investigated, but would not share details for privacy reasons. "We had not had any information at that point in time through the investigation that happened to suggest that there was malicious intent by Matthew Craswell," Beaulieu said. "There would have been an investigation that involved statements from parents, and statements from students and staff, and that was the decision that was made at the time. "However, now we hear quite a different story and that's what's really difficult." Court records show the details of that incident came to light for investigators last fall, after Craswell's devices had been seized from his Cornwall home and there was an analysis of his online activity. If anybody would have suspected that he had a criminal intent in mind.... He would have been done. Investigators learned that Craswell boasted about sexually touching three girls while teaching them. Police had been in contact with the girls' families after that, but parents ultimately decided not to allow their children to move forward with police interviews, so the investigation did not continue and Craswell was never charged for that incident. The only school incident for which Craswell faced charges was at Glen Stewart the next year. After that incident, the parent went to the school's principal at the time, who consulted with the PSB. In both cases, neither police nor Child Protective Services were contacted. "The Child Protection Act requires mandatory reporting of suspected cases of child sexual abuse to the Director of Child Protection or a peace officer and applies to everyone including school/program personnel," reads P.E.I.'s Child Sex Abuse Protocol. "The obligation to report is unrestricted by any pre-condition that the complaint be first reported within the respective departments, services or agencies, even if the perpetrator is alleged to be an employee of that institution, service or agency." Beaulieu said the PSB did its own investigations into both cases and found no evidence to suggest the incidents, in which the students were touched on their stomach and legs by Craswell, were sexual in nature. "Those decisions would have been made based on the statement of facts at the time about whether there was an intent and harm directed at students," Beaulieu said. "From that, I have been informed there was no intent or malicious intent behind it. And that's why there would not have been a call." Beaulieu told CBC News it is standard for schools to conduct their own investigations with assistance from the Public Schools Branch's human resources or student services teams. "People won't allow predatory behaviour if they suspect that it's there," she said. Craswell was moved to high schools Another detail that came out in court was that following the April 2024 internal investigation, the decision was made to only allow Craswell to teach older children going forward. Beaulieu said that was because of Craswell's own background and experience, and it was unconnected to the reported incident and investigation done at Glen Stewart. "It was deemed that he's high-school trained. And placements of people tend to be in the areas that they are formally trained," Beaulieu said. "If anybody would have suspected that he had a criminal intent in mind, he wouldn't have been placed anywhere in our system. Not high school. Not anywhere. He would have been done… RCMP would have been notified." When asked about the authority the PSB has to conduct investigations instead of allowing trained police investigators to take over, Beaulieu said "that's where we have engaged with working with child protective services." She added, "We want to talk with police and really outline all of those factors so that we ensure that the people that are discussing these matters and investigating these matters have the appropriate training and understanding." Beaulieu said the PSB has already begun those conversations with both child protection and police services. "We can ensure going forward that we are all solid making those decisions," she said. The director said other changes have already been made, and they did not wait for Craswell's guilty pleas last week. According to Beaulieu, the PSB adopted the recently announced centralized tracking system for staff complaints over the last school year. All school staff have also participated in the newly required Commit to Kids training program from the Canadian Centre for Child Protection. WATCH | Former chief justice of P.E.I. Supreme Court named to handle review of PSB's handling of complaints: Former chief justice of P.E.I. Supreme Court named to handle review of PSB's handling of complaints 11 hours ago Duration 4:29 P.E.I.'s former chief justice David Jenkins (shown) will lead a review looking at policies and procedures in Island schools to protect students from sexual predators. This, after a former substitute teacher pleaded guilty last week to sexual interference, in a case involving an elementary school student. CBC's Kerry Campbell reports. Beaulieu said the PSB will do whatever it takes to regain the trust of Island families, and it's open to other suggestions. When asked about accountability in the Public Schools Branch, Beaulieu said there is only one person accountable for what happened. "It's Matthew Craswell," she said.

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