Index
What the Law Says About ... Financial/Material Abuse

In Canada, some abusive actions are defined as crimes. Criminal offences are stated in the Criminal Code of Canada and apply in any province. The Criminal Code of Canada describes the different offences that someone can be charged with if they are accused of abusive actions toward older adults.

It is important to remember that whenever a person is charged with a criminal offence he or she is innocent until proven guilty. The lawyers who prosecute offenders have to prove he or she committed an offence beyond a reasonable doubt. In order to prove an offence has been committed, they need evidence. If you have been abused, consider keeping a record of the times when you are abused or when you get medical treatment. This record may be useful as evidence.

The criminal offences listed below cover most financial or material abusive action inflicted on older adults.

Link Theft
Link Theft by a person holding a Power of Attorney
Link Theft of money held under direction
Link False messages
Link Fraud
Link Using mail to defraud
Link Stealing and using credit card
Link Forgery
Link Uttering a forged document
Link Drawing document without authority
Link Obtaining anything by an instrument based upon a forged document
Link Robbery
Link Extortion
Link Offences under Alberta Personal Directives Act


Theft

link Top


Theft by a person holding a Power of Attorney

link Top


Theft of money held under direction

link Top


False messages

link Top


Fraud

link Top


Using mail to defraud

An exaggeration about something is not a false pretence unless it is carried to such an extreme that it amounts to a fraudulent representation of fact.

link Top


Stealing and using credit card

link Top


Forgery

A false document is:

link Top


Uttering a forged document

link Top


Drawing document without authority

link Top


Obtaining anything by an instrument based upon a forged document

link Top


Robbery

link Top


Extortion

link Top


Offences under the Alberta Personal Directives Act

It is an offence under the provincial Personal Directives Act to intentionally destroy, steal, hide, or alter a personal directive or a document that revokes a personal directive without the consent of the maker of the directive. The offence carries a fine of up to $10,000.

It is also an offence to require a person to make a personal directive as a condition for obtaining residential accommodation or for continuing to live in residential accommodation. The offence carries a fine up to $10,000.

link Top .  


Print Version of this page

Site Menu Map

Funding for OakNet is provided by the Alberta Law Foundation. Bobby WorldWide Approved AAA


[ Stories ] [ Index ] [ Search ]
[ Text Only Version ] [ Home ]

Updated: October 7, 2003
© Legal Resource Centre of Alberta Ltd. 2002

Site Menu image
Default text size
Larger text size
image image
image
 

Oak-Net Homepage Stories Site Index Search Text Only for Print Version Stories Index Search