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DavidEnaro
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Post by DavidEnaro » Sun May 24, 2020 9:27 pm

Lehmann still in shock over hookess death of victim Read more

She was only 17 but, by the time she was 10, she felt there was something wrong in her life. "I was a shy, shy kid," she says. The "noisy" teenage girls she encountered in her first summer school at the age of seven. She used to think a girl's best friend would be her mum, not her friend. "I knew I wasn't my real friend."

She was so afraid of social contact that it was impossible to communicate. She remembers her mother leaving her to go and "pick up the phone at the end of the day and try to talk to the girl I had the least interaction with", with a vague, if familiar feeling that something was not quite right.

Her parents were at a job interview. "I was trying to get my friends to come talk to me," Lehmann recalls. "I had this sense that I was too young to tell my parents something so upsetting."

She had a close and loving bond with her teacher who took her to school, and that was that. When she was 15, she asked her mother to bring her an "explicit message" she had received from her teacher, asking if she did not believe her daughter's story of a murder victim in their first year at the school.

Her mother wrote it in her diary. But Lehmann was still so afraid that night that she wrote an apology to the school principal, saying she was sorry to make sure she could talk to her daughter and her friends.

"That had nothing to do with the murder of Polly," she says. "The whole thing was about me feeling unlovable. I felt I didn't belong in the school and I thought I had no friends, I had no friends, they were like my whole world."

She tried to find a new school and eventually settled at the nearby school for a term with a very tight knit group of friends – but her new place came with a very strict dress code.

Lehmann found her mother, who was at the toilet when the police arrived at the home, so frightened that she ran off, leaving her daughter lying with a gaping wound and a black eye.

After the attack, Lehmann's family and friends were shocked when police arrested the young woman on suspicion of murder. At their request, the police turned her over to the authorities, who spent two days analysing her diary, the police statement saying, "The murder of Polly has been considered as a possible hate crime by the National Crime Agency".

Her story has been heard in a jury of 12 girls as well as five boys and she is expected to plead not guilty to murder at an early stage. "She just want
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Aboriginal communities sue federal government over cdp lands

by Andrew Coyne


TARLOO, B.C. -- A small number of the B.C. government's 10-member aboriginal leadership council filed a complaint with the Federal Court Friday, demanding the release of a large portion of the aboriginal land in eastern B.C. over a proposed gold mine.


At issue is a portion of the Northern Energy Corporation's (NEC) proposed mine site which lies south of Tearne Bay in northern B.C. and is the location of the first of two proposed mines on the Site C gold strip.


The First Nations' lawsuit was first published in the Vancouver Sun a year ago.


NEC said the claim against it is unworkable as an attempt to obtain compensation under the federal Constitution is barred.


It also said the B.C. legislature failed to enact legislation to recognize the rights of aboriginal people to engage in industrial development while the mine was under consideration.


The government has defended the decision by issuing a statement Friday saying "NEC had the appropriate land and resources, and the mine was constructed for the benefit of B.C. residents."


The British Columbia government released a statement Saturday saying the company would "continue to pursue every opportunity" to come to an agreement, but the group's case must be heard by a provincial court as there was a lack of legal basis to initiate a court action in B.C.


"NEC continues to demonstrate that a deal will do nothing to advance the project's economic well-being," said a spokesman. "It is imperative that NEC fully comply with the B.C. government's legal obligations."


The lawsuit is the latest action by the B.C. First Nations against the Crown to date.


On Tuesday the B.C. government launched proceedings against Hydro One, over what it calls "poorly run" negotiations over natural gas transmission lines to sell its natural gas supply to the province.


The B.C. Supreme Court was also scheduled to hear a lawsuit from the B.C. Government of Indian Chiefs against Environment and Climate Change Minister Peter Kent this week.

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