Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Comments closed.

Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.

Please see our Commenting Policy for more.

Calgary cancer faker Jennifer Halford faces 2 month delay in sentencing

WATCH ARCHIVE VIDEO: A Calgary mother has pleaded guilty to multiple fraud charges. As Tracy Nagai reports she faked having cancer in order to bilk her victims out of donations and cash – Nov 22, 2016

It will be another two months before a Calgary woman who raised donations by pretending to have cancer and claiming she was a Fort McMurray wildfire evacuee faces sentencing.

Story continues below advertisement

Jennifer Halford entered guilty pleas on seven counts of fraud last November dating back to the beginning of the year.

She claimed she had aggressive breast cancer and that she and her family had lost everything in the northern Alberta spring wildfires. She received donations including gift cards, food, clothing, babysitting and beauty treatments.

Sentencing arguments have now been rescheduled for June 19. Halford, who is free pending her sentencing, was not in court Tuesday.

Crown prosecutor Jason Wuttunee said the court had ordered a report from probation services, as well as a psychiatric report from Alberta Health Services. Both needed more time to finish, he said.

There is no risk of the case being contested due to an unreasonable delay, he added.

Story continues below advertisement

“There’s nothing unusual in this process,” he said. “This is just the way the justice system happens.”

When Halford entered guilty pleas last November, Wuttunee said she took advantage of people’s good will.

“She effectively manipulated those two fictitious components of her story in order to gain sympathy and various items of charity from the goodwill of other people that she either knew in the community or to whom she was a stranger,” he said.

Halford took advantage of cancer survivors, as well as mothers she met in 2008 when her daughter was receiving treatment for mitochondrial disease. Her five-year-old daughter died in January, 2011.

Halford’s lawyer said her client has shown remorse and expressed the need to take responsibility for her actions.

Story continues below advertisement

“Ms. Halford has expressed the need to take responsibility for the actions that she has committed,” Michelle Parhar said in November.

“It avoids all of the complainants having to come to court and testify. It has been very overwhelming for her and obviously having taken ownership for what she has done is difficult, but she’s managed to do it.”

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article