“Nunavut court accepts joint sentence deal on Dejaeger’s Alberta sex crimes” & related articles

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Pedophile ex-priest pleaded guilty Sept. 29 to four Alberta charges

Nunatsiaq Online

23 October 2015

JIM BELL

An RCMP officer leads Eric Dejaeger into the Nunavut Court of Justice in Iqaluit earlier this year during his trial (FILE PHOTO)
An RCMP officer leads Eric Dejaeger into the Nunavut Court of Justice in Iqaluit earlier this year during his trial (FILE PHOTO)

Justice Susan Cooper has accepted four five-year concurrent jail sentences that lawyers submitted to her jointly this past Sept. 29 for four sex crimes that the pedophile ex-priest, Eric Dejaeger, now 69, committed against three children in Alberta nearly 40 years ago.

“It is likely that all victims of Mr. Dejaeger have now come forward,” Cooper said.

Dejeager, who earned his notoriety for molesting numerous Inuit children in Baker Lake and Igloolik, pleaded guilty to the four charges last month in Iqaluit.

That includes one count of indecent assault for his molestation of a nine-year-old Aboriginal altar boy in Grande Cache, Alta., on at least 10 occasions at home and on the land between 1974 and 1976.

Another two counts, attempted buggery and indecent assault, arise from offences he committed against an eight-year-old boy in Edmonton between 1975 and 1978.

The fourth count, indecent assault, relates to fondling and digital penetration of the Edmonton boy’s six-year-old sister, also between 1975 and 1978.

The brother and sister belonged to devout Roman Catholic family who Dejaeger befriended while attending Newman Theological College in Edmonton, Cooper said in her judgment.

The children had sometimes been left in Dejaeger’s care over a period of about three years and he committed some of those crimes after taking the children to a religious retreat outside Edmonton.

To ensure her silence, Dejaeger told the sister the sex acts he forced on her were “a secret between her, him and God,” Cooper said.

Dejaeger made similar threats against the other two Alberta children to intimidate them into remaining silent about his molestation, which included genital fondling, oral sex and attempted buggery.

The four charges were filed in Edmonton after the victims heard news reports about Dejaeger’s return to Canada from Belgium in 2011, when he returned to face numerous sex charges related to his work as a priest in Igloolik between 1978 and 1982.

Dejaeger has already served out a five-year jail sentence for nine convictions for sex crimes he committed in Baker Lake in the late 1980s, but he fled Canada for Belgium in 1995 to avoid facing the first set of Igloolik charges.

Following a long, dramatic trial held through 2013 and 2014 at the Nunavut Court of Justice in Iqaluit, Justice Robert Kilpatrick convicted Dejaeger on 24 of 68 charges the ex-priest had stood trial on.

Dejeager had also pleased guilty to eight other Igloolik charges at the beginning of the trial, bringing the total number of Igloolik convictions to 32.

For those, Kilpatrick imposed a sentence of 19 years in prison, minus eight years, calculated on a two-for-one basis, to account for the four years he spent awaiting trial.

After that, the four Alberta charges were transferred to the Nunavut court.

Cooper imposed four five-year sentences on Dejaeger for each of his Alberta convictions, to be served concurrently — which means he’ll serve them at the same time.

Also, the four five-year sentences are to be served concurrently with the 11-year penalty that Kilpatrick imposed earlier this year, Cooper said.

In explaining her decision, Cooper said judges in Canada are bound by case law to accept sentence submissions that arise from negotiations between Crown and defence lawyers.

She said judges may only reject such negotiated sentence submissions if they are so unprecedented they threaten to bring the justice system into disrepute.

“I understand that is difficult for the public to understand this,” Cooper said.

Dejaeger’s career as a child molester may yet produce more work for the courts.

At the end of his court appearance, Cooper noted that Dejaeger is representing himself in an appeal on all or some of his Igloolik convictions.

Defence lawyer Malcolm Kempt and Crown lawyer Barry McLaren each said they know nothing about Dejeaeger’s self-represented appeal.

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Defrocked Arctic priest convicted of sex offences against children to appeal

Yahoo!  News

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A defrocked Arctic priest in prison for dozens of sex offences against Inuit children is appealing.

The news came out in a Nunavut court in Iqaluit on Thursday as Eric Dejaeger was sentenced for more child sex assaults in Alberta.

The former Oblate was given five-year sentences for acts committed against three children between the ages of six and nine in Edmonton and Grande Cache in the 1970s.

One of the victims, then a nine-year-old altar boy, was assaulted over four years. The other two were a brother and sister, eight and six, who were assaulted over a three-year period.

In victim impact statements, the brother told court he has become aggressive and has trouble controlling his impulses. His sister said she has suffered from substance abuse and depression.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether Dejaeger intends to seek a review of the verdicts or challenge the sentence for the 32 previous convictions involving northern children.

The victims in those cases included 12 boys, 10 girls and one dog.

Dejaeger, 69, is representing himself and is next to appear in court Nov. 10. That hearing has been scheduled to determine if Dejaeger has found a lawyer.

He was already serving 19 years in Nunavut’s Baffin Correctional Centre before Thursday’s sentencing.

(APTN)

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Former Arctic priest Eric Dejaeger to appeal in child-sex case

Global News Toronto

22 October 2015
By Staff The Canadian Press

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A defrocked Arctic priest in prison for dozens of sex offences against Inuit children is appealing.

The news came out in a Nunavut court in Iqaluit on Thursday as Eric Dejaeger was sentenced for more child sex assaults in Alberta.

The former Oblate was given five-year sentences for acts committed against three children between the ages of six and nine in Edmonton and Grande Cache in the 1970s.
Related

Former Arctic priest Eric Dejaeger pleads not guilty to 76 charges of sex abuse
Eric Dejaeger leaves an Iqaluit, Nunavut courtroom Jan. 20, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Windeyer Former arctic priest convicted of child sexual abuse to address court
Catholic priest Eric Dejaeger leaves an Iqaluit, Nunavut courtroom Jan. 20, 2011 after his first appearance for six child sexual abuse charges in Igloolik dating back to the 1970s. Former Arctic priest gets 19 years for sex offences

One of the victims, then a nine-year-old altar boy, was assaulted over four years. The other two were a brother and sister, eight and six, who were assaulted over a three-year period.

READ MORE: Northern priest Eric Dejaeger pleads guilty to some sex charges

In victim impact statements, the brother told court he has become aggressive and has trouble controlling his impulses. His sister said she has suffered from substance abuse and depression.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether Dejaeger intends to seek a review of the verdicts or challenge the sentence for the 32 previous convictions involving northern children.

The victims in those cases included 12 boys, 10 girls and one dog.

Dejaeger, 69, is representing himself and is next to appear in court Nov. 10. That hearing has been scheduled to determine if Dejaeger has found a lawyer.

He was already serving 19 years in Nunavut’s Baffin Correctional Centre before Thursday’s sentencing.

With files from APTN.

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Defrocked Arctic priest convicted of sex offences against children to appeal

News 1130

by The Canadian Press

Posted Oct 22, 2015 12:29 pm PDT

Last Updated Oct 23, 2015 at 6:00 am PDT

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A defrocked Arctic priest in prison for dozens of sex offences against Inuit children is appealing.

The news came out in a Nunavut court in Iqaluit on Thursday as Eric Dejaeger was sentenced for more child sex assaults in Alberta.

The former Oblate was given five-year sentences for acts committed against three children between the ages of six and nine in Edmonton and Grande Cache in the 1970s.

One of the victims, then a nine-year-old altar boy, was assaulted over four years. The other two were a brother and sister, eight and six, who were assaulted over a three-year period.

In victim impact statements, the brother told court he has become aggressive and has trouble controlling his impulses. His sister said she has suffered from substance abuse and depression.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether Dejaeger intends to seek a review of the verdicts or challenge the sentence for the 32 previous convictions involving northern children.

The victims in those cases included 12 boys, 10 girls and one dog.

Dejaeger, 69, is representing himself and is next to appear in court Nov. 10. That hearing has been scheduled to determine if Dejaeger has found a lawyer.

He was already serving 19 years in Nunavut’s Baffin Correctional Centre before Thursday’s sentencing.

(APTN)