The Supreme Court in Smithers recently hosted a group of girls from Lakes District Secondary School in Lake for a tour of the court and presentations on the justice system.
The event on Dec. 10 coincided with International Human Rights Day and the United Nation’s annual 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Based Violence.
The group of 23 students, from Grades 8 to 12 were selected from over 50 applicants to attend the Lady Justice Law Talk at the Supreme Court, trip organizer and law articling student Peggy Mills told Lakes District .
Several speakers gave presentations to the students including Madam Justice Humphries of the B.C. Supreme Court, Judge Craig Sicotte of the Provincial Court, Justice of the Peace and Judicial Case Manager Sharon MacGregor, Crown Prosecutor Nina Purewal and Megan Olson, managing lawyer of the new Parents Legal Centre in Smithers.
The topics covered career opportunities for women in legal professions, how the justice system works and human rights and equality in Canada, among others.
“Opening an educational dialogue with young women about the justice system may be interpreted as a positive response from the local legal community to the ‘Justice for Jessica’ campaign which has arisen and taken root in response to the growing number of murdered and missing women (many of whom were indigenous) along Highway 16, the so-called ‘Highway of Tears,” Mills explained.
The body of 18-year-old Jessica Patrick, a member of the Lake Babine First Nation, was found along a steep bank on Hudson Bay Mountain Road in Smithers in September.
LOOK BACK: https://www.abbynews.com/news/rcmp-confirm-death-of-missing-bc-teen-jessica-patrick/
A criminal investigation into her death is ongoing.