Ex-students claim abuse at N.S. schools for deaf
Last Updated: Monday, February 15, 2010 | 7:51 AM AT
CBC News
Two men have launched a class-action lawsuit claiming they were sexually and physically abused while at schools for the deaf in Nova Scotia.
Walter Wile, of Calgary, and Myles Murphy, from St. John's, have filed the lawsuit in Nova Scotia Supreme Court.
Wile, 61, claims he was physically and sexually abused during the nine years he spent at both the Halifax and Amherst schools in the 1950s and 1960s.
Murphy, 59, claims he was psychologically and physically abused by employees and students while he was at the residential school in Amherst in the early 1960s.
"The children were easily victimized because they were cut off from their families and also really cut off in a sense because of language, so they were perfect victims for sexual wrongdoing," said Tony Merchant, the Saskatchewan-based lawyer handling the suit.
He said eight people have joined the class-action lawsuit so far.
None of the allegations have been proven in court and the province has not filed a defence.
Merchant said the province has not yet been served because he's waiting to see whether similar cases in other provinces are certified. Court must approve a class-action case before it can proceed.
The Halifax school was open from 1856 to 1961. The larger school that opened in Amherst, in northwestern Nova Scotia, shut its doors in 1995. It took in students from around Atlantic Canada.
Share Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- Halifax police warn of sex offender's release
- Halifax police issued a warning Friday about a man released from prison for offences against children. more »
- Sunken boat refloated in Sydney Harbour
- A half-sunken boat abandoned in Sydney Harbour several years ago was refloated Friday in the first step toward removing the eyesore. more »
- Inmate strangler sentenced today
- A Dartmouth prisoner who strangled his cellmate to death three years ago will spend at least another 14 years behind bars. more »
- 902 numbers running out in N.S., P.E.I.
- The process has begun to figure out how to handle an expected phone number shortage in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. more »
Top News Headlines
- Canadian woman continues tweeting her way to the top of Everest
- Sandra Leduc is taking a second run at Mount Everest's summit after a deadly storm forced her back down the mountain and killed four others on Sunday. The Canadian lawyer and government worker is tweeting her progress along the way. more »
- Employment Insurance review boards to be scrapped
- The federal government is scrapping two review boards used by people appealing decisions made about their employment insurance. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Canada ending 'Buffalo shuffle' for visas, closing consulate
- The federal government is shutting the Canadian consulate in Buffalo less than two years after costly renovations, while dropping a requirement for visas to be renewed outside the country, CBC News has learned. more »
- New EI rules worry seasonal workers in N.S.
- Police looking for missing East Dover woman
- Shots fired on Quinpool Road in Halifax
- N.S. man acquitted in boy's 2010 death
- Canadian Hurricane Centre predicts 9 to 15 storms in 2012
- 902 numbers running out in N.S., P.E.I.
- ATV run-in with barbed wire leads to charges
- Atlantic Lottery replacing old VLTs
- 44 new Order of Canada recipients

