"CAUTION"

Before you go any further

I must tell you however that Newfoundland is not just a quaint tourist destination,

as the following pretty little countryside and seascape photos might suggest .... or conversely

the  place where the not very pretty seal hunt occurs.

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

       

 

 

 

or you have these pictures of Newfoundland

 

 

The seal hunt of Newfoundland

 

 

 

This is how they look before the barbarians come to the pups’ nursery


 

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And this is how they look after their brief encounter with a bat with a spike like head to batter the babies.

 

 


 

Newfoundland is also infamous for its indifference to one of its most

precious resources; its orphaned, unwanted foster children.

 

Childhood sexual abuse has long been rampant and continues to receive justice’s blind eye.

Not only sex abuse of children but an elitist attitude allowing misery upon misery to be

heaped upon children of a physical  and psychological nature by religious people,

teachers, social workers and in general professional people, a different kind of JUSTICE.

 

In the time that I’ve been putting this page together a suspected murderess was allowed

To go free on bail, virtually unsupervised and against the strong wishes of the grandparents

of the child in the care of the suspected murderess. Shirley Turner, a medical a doctor

 fled the USA after allegedly murdering the only child of the above mentioned grandparents. When the grand parents came to Newfoundland and pressed the courts to grow a set

and protect their only surviving grandchild the courts again in the always special interests

of the elite dithered and moped their way through endless hearings.  The Government continued to leave this helpless little child in the care of a suspected murderess and overall nut case. When Turner saw that the grandparents were pushing the press and the television media and radio stations outside of Newfoundland  to focus on this travesty known as 'the Newfoundland Justice system' Turner walked into the Atlantic Ocean and drowned herself and their infant grandchild.


ANOTHER ENQUIRY ON NEWFOUNDLAND'S JUSTICE DEPARTMENT AND LOCAL LAWYERS  ABILITIES

As conducted by

Mr. Justice Antonio Lamer

(RETIRED SUPREME COURT JUSTICE SENT DOWN FROM UP AWAY)

(CASES OF PEOPLE WRONGLY CHARGED, CONVICTED AND SENT TO JAIL by the Newfoundland Justice System)


From: "CBC News Online" To: Subject: CBC News - LAWYER TRAUMATIZED BY MT. CASHEL CASE Date: Wednesday, January 07, 2004 11:25 PM This email has been sent to you by me The following is a news item posted on CBC NEWS ONLINE at http://www.cbc.ca/news ____________________________________________________ LAWYER TRAUMATIZED BY MT. CASHEL CASE WebPosted Thu Sep 25 17:05:51 2003 st. john's---A lawyer says he was so traumatized by working on the inquiry into sexual abuse at the Mount Cashel orphanage, he had trouble working on Ronald Dalton's appeal. David Day told the Lamer inquiry into wrongful convictions in Newfoundland and Labrador on Wednesday that the stress of working as counsel to the Hughes inquiry into the Mount Cashel abuse left him with migraines. "I cannot imagine I shall ever recover from that experience, completely, in terms of the ability to focus and to function efficiently," Day told the inquiry. The Mount Cashel case involved more than 450 victims of alleged sexual abuse over a period of nearly 50 years. Antonio Lamer, a former justice on the Supreme Court, is leading the commission that is looking into the long delay between Dalton's wrongful conviction and his release from prison. He spent more than eight years behind bars while a string of lawyers worked on his appeal. Day took over the appeal file from Dalton's original trial lawyer, David Eaton, and eventually passed it on to Jerome Kennedy. Although he admitted to working slowly on the file, Day said his efforts contributed to the eventual success of the appeal. Dalton was accused and convicted of murdering his wife in 1989. FROM SEPT. 23, 2003: Commissioner to hear argument to expand Nfld. wrongful convictions inquiry The verdict was eventually overturned on appeal, and a new trial was ordered in which he was acquitted. The inquiry, which is also looking into the wrongful convictions of Randy Druken and Gregory Parsons, is limited to examining the delay in Dalton's appeal. He wants Lamer's final report to discuss how and why he was accused in the first place. Copyright (C) 2003 CBC. All rights reserved.

 

From: To: Subject: CBCNEWS STJOHNS - Dalton's first lawyer testifies about delay Date: Wednesday, January 07, 2004 11:29 PM  stjohns.cbc.ca and sent you this CBC News story with the comment: "" ________________________________________________________________________ DALTON'S FIRST LAWYER TESTIFIES ABOUT DELAY ST. JOHN'S - The lawyer who defended Ronald Dalton at his original murder trial testified Wednesday the guilty verdict had shocked him. David Eaton told the Lamer inquiry he had been devastated by the outcome and he had found it emotionally difficult to read the transcript of the trial. He says that contributed to the delay in appealing the verdict. Earlier coverage: Dalton lays out delay details Dalton told the inquiry Tuesday he wrote the lawyer four times in 15 months, but heard nothing back. Eaton says he didn't realize the gap was that long. The told the commissioner, Antonio Lamer, he had been communicating with Dalton's family, and thought information had been passed on. Eaton also said it had been difficult to contact Dalton by phone because he was imprisoned at the Renous maximum security penitentiary. The St. John's lawyer says he had not meant to abandon Dalton. He says when he couldn't produce any good news, he turned the case over to someone else. That was almost three years after the first trial ended. Related story: Legal Aid lacks resources, inquiry told Dalton was convicted in 1989 of killing his wife Brenda the year before at their Gander home. It took more than eight years for the appeal to be heard. Dalton eventually was acquitted at a retrial when forensic specialists agreed with his contention that his wife choked to death on cereal. This year, the province appointed former chief justice Antonio Lamer to review Dalton's delay, as well as the discredited murder convictions of Randy Druken and Gregory Parsons. Copyright © 2004 CBC All Rights Reserved ________________________________________________________________________ This story appears on http://cbc.ca at the following URL: http://stjohns.cbc.ca/regional/servlet/View?filename=nf_dalton_eaton_20030924


And even as the Hughes Enquiry was underway the same old, same old was going on...you have to wonder.. is it ineptitude or corruption?

Another case in point a young man alleged to have sexually assaulted numerous women and now up for

indefinite incarceration was shown to have been transferred to thirty different foster homes and a stay

at  this self same infamous Mount Cashel Orphanage. This is all since the Hughes enquiry

where the horrors of  the Children's  Protection Service or Child

Welfare Service were shown to be so flawed.

 

So the material beyond these pretty little tourist shots won't be pleasant reading.

 

               

  

 

 

 

Enjoy the few tourist photos shown above but if the abuses shown above towards

 the children or the seal slaughter  affects you at all contact the man responsible for

 allowing these atrocities to continue and his Conservative government,

Premier Danny Williams

 

 

 

 

Danny's email is

 

premier@gov.nf.ca

or

premier@gov.nl.ca

 

  and then get ready to hear a Tale of Horror

about a House of Horrors run by The Christian Brothers of Ireland

and for some years run by the Christian Brothers Institute

of New York, New York

whose atrocities were totally ignored by all of the various Governments in charge.

And sadly in many ways this continues to this day.

canflag

 

God looking at what has been wrought

 

Page three

(click  below)

rogues gallery