Latest news with #NunavutCourtofJustice


CBC
12-03-2025
- CBC
Nunavut judge approves $8M settlement for victims abused by former teacher
Social Sharing WARNING: This story contains details of sexual abuse. A Nunavut judge has approved a settlement in a class-action lawsuit against the Nunavut government on behalf of a group of students who were sexually abused by a teacher in the territory. It means the Nunavut government will now pay out $8 million in a lawsuit started by students who were sexually abused by Maurice Cloughley between 1969 and 1981 The Nunavut government agreed to settle the class action in May, and Nunavut Chief Justice Susan Cooper has approved the settlement in a written decision. That decision was filed in the Nunavut Court of Justice on Tuesday. Cloughley pleaded guilty mid-trial in 1996 to nine charges of abusing school children in several Arctic communities between 1967 and 1981. He originally faced 22 charges. Cloughley served three years of a 10-year sentence. The class-action lawsuit alleges the territorial government did not do enough to protect students from abuse and may have known about the abuse without doing anything about it. Compensation for the plaintiffs will range from $25,000 to $200,000, based on their injuries. In her decision, Cooper said the class action lawsuit is estimated to have about 250 members. Years in the making The lawsuit was first filed in 2004 with 31 plaintiffs. Then, in 2008, a second similar lawsuit with 32 plaintiffs was filed against the federal government and the governments of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories. Those lawsuits stalled until 2015, when two law firms teamed up and combined the cases into a single new case. Alan Regel, a lawyer representing the victims, previously told CBC News some of the plaintiffs had died since the lawsuit was first launched.


CBC
27-01-2025
- Politics
- CBC
Number of justices of the peace declining in Nunavut
Social Sharing The number of justices of the peace (JPs) in Nunavut has gone down by 40 per cent since 2016, according to numbers from the territory's justice department. JPs are judicial officers who issue warrants, and regularly conduct first appearance and bail hearings, among other matters. There are currently 31 JPs in the territory, down from 51 in 2016. The number of Nunavut communities with a JP has also decreased in that time, from 22 to 17. Iqaluit-based civil lawyer Anne Crawford says JPs hold crucial local knowledge specific to their communities, and fewer JPs mean more delays in the court system. "We see the impacts in terms of not being able to resolve situations of domestic violence because things circle round and round … and people are released again and again," she said. Over time, those situations can worsen, she said, and eventually people begin to lose faith in the judicial process. "Many times women don't want to end up in a big formal court, making witness statements and dealing with Crown prosecutors. So it really hampers community resolution." The Nunavut Court of Justice serves both the superior and territorial court for the territory, meaning it's a unitary court system. Crawford believes that's allowed the Nunavut government to disengage with policies to do with the justice system, including with JPs. In written statements to CBC News, the justice department says it doesn't have definitive information behind the decline in JPs, but it will continue to monitor the situation. "The Nunavut Court has always relied heavily on the contributions of its community justices of the peace to deliver justice in Nunavut. It plans to continue to do so," the statement reads. "Having a thriving community JP program is key to the proper administration of justice in Nunavut." Recruiting JPs a priority, says new chief justice Nunavut's new chief justice, Susan Cooper, was officially sworn in on Friday, after being appointed by the prime minister late last year. She has said that community engagement would be a priority for her in her new role, and in particular the recruitment and training of community justices of the peace in all three Nunavut regions. She has also recently taken on the role as chair of the independent justices of the peace appointment committee. Crawford believes the focus has to be on appointments among Inuit, and in communities outside of Iqaluit.