Waterloo Region Record

Girls’ deaths in B.C. prompt debate about judges and domestic violence

- Laura Kane

VANCOUVER — The deaths of two young girls in British Columbia who were previously the subject of a custody dispute have prompted debate about how judges decide cases involving allegation­s of domestic violence.

Andrew Berry, 43, has been charged with two counts of second-degree murder in the deaths of his six-year-old daughter Chloe and her four-year-old sister Aubrey. The sisters’ bodies were found on Christmas Day inside a Victoria-area home.

Berry made his first appearance in provincial court Thursday and his case was adjourned until February. None of the allegation­s against him have been tested in court.

The girls’ mother, Sarah Cotton, alleged during a custody dispute in 2016 that Berry had threatened to blow up their home, had thrown clothing at her and pinned her to a bed.

A B.C. Supreme Court justice hearing the case ruled his behaviour did not justify denying him significan­t time with the children.

Angela Marie MacDougall of Battered Women’s Support Services said more training is needed to help judges understand the warning signs of family violence.

“Domestic homicide is one of the most predictabl­e homicides that there is and the most preventabl­e,” said MacDougall. “What happens consistent­ly is that the system fails to take it seriously — minimizes it, denies the implicatio­ns and doesn’t hold the abusive partner accountabl­e.”

Miriam Kresivo, president of the Law Society of B.C., said the parents had come to their own agreement on a parenting schedule that included visits with the father and it’s hard to say that Justice Victoria Gray should have reached a different conclusion.

Gray’s ruling, delivered last May, was intended to settle custody of the children and distributi­on of assets after Berry and Cotton separated in 2013.

Cotton’s position was that she should primarily parent and make decisions concerning the children, while the father sought an order that the parents share the same amount of time with them and have an equal voice in their activities.

Cotton alleged in court that in the months before the separation, Berry grew increasing­ly critical and called her foul names in front of their daughters.

One morning, Cotton said Berry threw a drink at her. He sent her an email requesting a detailed budget before he came home at lunch looking “angry and crazed” and threatened to “blow up the house,” Cotton alleged.

A couple days later, Cotton said she was in bed at 3 a.m. when he pinned her down after pulling the bed covers off her. She said she called police and the couple separated.

The judgment says Berry did not testify about these allegation­s. He was not represente­d by a lawyer in court.

The province’s child welfare agency investigat­ed an allegation he inappropri­ately touched one of his daughters in 2015.

In court, Berry testified he tickled one of the girls but not inappropri­ately.

Gray concluded that Berry’s aggressive behaviour around the time of separation and during some exchanges of the children had been “transient and relatively minor.”

The children are generally happy and healthy, she wrote. She ruled the children should spend more time with their mother, with some time spent with the father on evenings and weekends.

“The father is a loving father who has much to offer his daughters. It is in the best interests of the girls to have significan­t parenting time with the father.”

The federal government announced nearly $100,000 in new funding last April to the National Judicial Institute to develop training for judges on genderbase­d violence, including sexual assault and domestic violence.

Every federally appointed judge goes through two weeks of mandatory training in their first year, which includes a family law component that covers custody disputes, said Justice Adele Kent, head of the institute and an Alberta judge.

The aim is to give judges skills to decide each case on its individual evidence. Judges learn how to manage high-conflict cases, communicat­e with agitated people, understand the social context for domestic violence and dispel myths, Kent said.

Tracy Porteous, executive director of the Ending Violence Associatio­n of BC, said in addition to more training for judges, more funding is needed to ensure victims have access to a community-based advocate to help them develop a safety plan.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Hundreds of people hold candles in memory of Aubrey Berry, 4, and her sister Chloe, 6, during a vigil held at Willows Beach in Oak Bay, B.C., on Dec. 30. The girls’ father has been charged with second-degree murder.
CHAD HIPOLITO, THE CANADIAN PRESS Hundreds of people hold candles in memory of Aubrey Berry, 4, and her sister Chloe, 6, during a vigil held at Willows Beach in Oak Bay, B.C., on Dec. 30. The girls’ father has been charged with second-degree murder.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada