Edmonton Journal

Soccer coach charged with sexual offences

Charges span 20 years, including time Birarda worked with national teams

- PATRICK JOHNSTON With files from J.J. Adams and Keith Fraser

Bob Birarda, the former coach of the Vancouver Whitecaps' women's team who was the subject of a series of complaints by former players, has been charged with a series of sexual offences.

According to the B.C. Prosecutio­n Service, the alleged offences took place over a span of 20 years, from Jan. 1, 1988, to March 25, 2008, “at or near North Vancouver, Burnaby and West Vancouver.”

Birarda has been charged with six counts of sexual exploitati­on, two counts of sexual assault and one count of child luring. The allegation­s cover offences against four people.

Birarda made his first appearance at North Vancouver provincial court on Wednesday and was ordered released on bail by Judge Lyndsay Smith. Birarda is scheduled to appear again in court on Jan. 28.

Publicatio­n bans have been issued under sections 517 — a temporary ban on reporting details at the bail hearing — and 486.4 of the criminal code. The latter protects the identities of the complainan­ts.

Birarda coached the Whitecaps women from 2006-08. The team was disbanded in 2012. He was also coach of the Canadian U-20 women's team around the same time, as well as assistant coach on the 2008 Olympic team.

He also coached a local girls youth team in recent years. Asked for comment, Coastal FC responded: “He hasn't been a coach with us since his initial suspension. That team he did coach also graduated more than 15 years ago so there has been no interactio­n for quite a while.”

In February 2019, former women's team player Ciara Mccormack made public criticism of how the team had handled complaints about the coaching staff in 2007 and 2008. Thirteen former players from the women's team posted complaints about Birarda online in April 2019.

Mccormack told Postmedia on Thursday she didn't think charges would ever be laid against Birarda.

“Very emotional. Surprised. I didn't know it was coming. It's been a very, very long road to get to this point,” she said of what she had been feeling since she first learned on Wednesday that her former coach had been arrested and charged.

“I'm grateful, I'm happy for the other women that came forward (with allegation­s).”

She said she and her former teammates figure they had tried to come forward and tell people “29 or 30 times in the 11 years before my blog.” It wasn't until they began to speak publicly that they started to think maybe change might happen.

“I had zero faith in the system. It's all been on us. To actually see something function properly, it's a relief,” Mccormack said of charges being laid. “I've gone from like a negative 10 to a minus one in my faith in the system. I hope it continues to prove me wrong.”

She said the support that Whitecaps fans showed for them in 2019 by repeatedly walking out of the stands during games, leaving behind a silent south end at B.C. Place Stadium, meant a lot to the players who ended up speaking to the police.

“I think, at the end of the day, this has come because the fans walked out. They amplified the story,” she said. “(They) wouldn't have come forward without a safe space and the fans walking out created that. The credit goes to the fans for what they did. A huge thank you to everybody that stepped up.”

After a series of walkouts, the Whitecaps' owners apologized for previous responses to the complaints in May 2019 and the team then hired an outside investigat­or to review their investigat­ions and handling of the complaints.

The report was released in December 2019 and downplayed the notion of wrongdoing by the team's leadership in handling the complaints, but also said they hadn't been transparen­t enough with the players after Birarda was dismissed from the Whitecaps in 2008, nor did they make efforts to ensure the coach had adhered to a code of conduct that had been imposed by the team.

Under the terms of his bail, as imposed by Judge Smith, Birarda is to report to a bail supervisor and provide them with an address and phone number, which he may not change without permission. He is required to keep the peace and be of good behaviour and not possess any weapons or firearms.

He is not to have any contact with four specific individual­s, nor is he to attend any place of work, school or where the individual­s worship — and if he happens to see them, he must leave.

He can't attend public parks, public swimming areas, community centres, theatres or soccer fields where persons under the age of 18 are present. There are some exceptions to that condition, where there is prior written permission from the bail supervisor. He can also be in those locations in the immediate presence of another adult approved of in advance by the bail supervisor.

He's not to have any contact or communicat­ion, directly or indirectly, or be in the presence of any person under the age of 18 years, except with the previous exceptions.

He must not engage in coaching or related activities, volunteer work or employment that could bring him in contact with persons under the age of 18.

 ?? IAN SMITH/ FILES ?? Bob Birarda, who coached the Vancouver Whitecaps women's team from 2006-08, is facing six counts of sexual exploitati­on, two counts of sexual assault and one count of child luring.
IAN SMITH/ FILES Bob Birarda, who coached the Vancouver Whitecaps women's team from 2006-08, is facing six counts of sexual exploitati­on, two counts of sexual assault and one count of child luring.

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