B.C.’s attorney general hopes new bail law can prevent further partner violence
VICTORIA — British Columbia Attorney General Niki Sharma says she is hopeful that new bail legislation introduced by the federal government will prevent a repeat of the events that led to death of a Kelowna woman.
Bailey McCourt’s ex-husband James Plover was charged with second-degree murder shortly after being freed on bail following his conviction for choking someone and uttering threats.
“What happened with Bailey McCourt should never happen again,” Sharma said. “I’m grateful to her family, who has been advocating for changes.”
Sharma has previously identified the case in the need for stronger legal safeguards against intimate-partner violence, and the new law would move the burden of proof from the prosecution to the accused to justify why they should be freed while charged with such serious assaults, in a principle known as reverse onus.


