B.C. wants intimate-partner violence protection in federal bail reform bill
VICTORIA — British Columbia’s attorney general says she’s hopeful a federal bill on bail reform being introduced in Parliament next week will address the need for more protections in intimate-partner and gender-based violence cases.
Niki Sharma says in a statement that B.C. has been pressing the federal government for “real reform” that would include stronger bail and sentencing laws as well as tougher consequences for repeat violent offenders.
Sharma says the July killing of Kelowna woman Bailey McCourt, whose estranged spouse is accused of murdering her, is a “heartbreaking reminder of what’s at stake” and highlights the need for stronger legal safeguards against intimate-partner violence.
The accused, James Plover, had been convicted of choking someone and freed on $500 bail just hours before the alleged attack on his estranged wife.


