May 4, 2024
B.C. recovery home staff knew of assault claims against employee 1 month before telling police, posts allege | CBC News

B.C. recovery home staff knew of assault claims against employee 1 month before telling police, posts allege | CBC News

The New Westminister addiction recovery facility that employed a man charged with assaulting vulnerable women attempted to prevent survivors and community members from speaking publicly a month before staff said they first learned of the allegations and reported them to police, according to posts and messages obtained by CBC News.

And at least two Last Door Recovery Society leaders attempted to discourage and remove online posts by women who say Adam Haber assaulted them or others even after police began investigating him in late January.

Last week, Haber was charged with assaulting three vulnerable former clients of the sister, women-only Westminister House whom he met through his time as a client, sponsor and later fitness trainer at Last Door dating back to 2010.

Haber has not yet entered a plea, and the allegations have not been proven in court. 

A bald man in a grey T-shirt and blue athletic shorts crosses his arms and smiles for a photo.
Adam Haber is pictured in a photo that accompanied his employee biography with the Last Door Addiction Treatment Centre in New Westminster, B.C. (Last Door Addiction Treatment Centre)

The separate, nonprofit addiction recovery facilities collaborate on fundraising, send clients to the same community-based recovery meetings and together constitute New West Recovery, “Canada’s addiction recovery community.” 

Police say there are at least 11 women who have reported alleged assaults to police and are urging more to come forward.

Multiple former clients told CBC News Westminister House staff ignored at least three reports alleging Haber had assaulted them or another woman, and that his predatory behaviour was an “open secret” among staff and clients at both facilities for more than a decade.

In previous statements to CBC News and other media, Last Door has repeatedly denied its staff had any knowledge of the allegations before they surfaced in a private Facebook group in late January. Staff at the society reported them to police and fired Haber shortly after.

But posts and messages obtained by CBC News show Last Door deleted a comment from a witness who raised the allegations online more than a month before.

On Dec. 17, former client Sarah Burfoot commented on a public Facebook post by Last Door that named Haber as an employee.

A comment thread on a Facebook post.
Former Westminister House client Sarah Burfoot raised allegations about Haber on a Last Door Facebook post on Dec. 17, 2022. She was blocked, and the post was deleted. (Noah Gelb)

Burfoot told CBC News she witnessed Haber attempt to assault a friend of hers who had been a former client of Westminister House, but nothing was done when she reported it to a staff member there.

CBC spoke to another former client, who recalled Burfoot mentioning the alleged assault at the time.

When Burfoot saw Last Door’s post nearly a decade later, she said she’d had enough. 

“So after all the sexual assault allegations from multiple women and girls in the community, you still decide to keep a sexual predator employed as your fitness trainer… interesting,” Burfoot commented on the post.

The post and her comment were both deleted that day, and Burfoot was blocked by the page administrator, according to screenshots obtained by CBC News. Her follow-up messages to staff went unanswered. 

A vehicle is pictured with an ad on the back for Westminster House. A line on the bottom-left of the ad says, 'Addicted? We can help.'
The back of a vehicle is pictured with an ad for Westminster House in New Westminster, British Columbia, on Monday, June 5, 2023. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Witness’s comment deleted 

Senior staff at Last Door continued to try to prevent community members from posting about the allegations against Haber or that facilities had looked the other way, even after police began investigating, according to further posts and messages obtained by CBC News.

Burfoot’s comment had started conversations among former clients about the allegations, and on Jan. 27, she and several others, including Noah Gelb, started a Facebook group titled “Stop Adam H.”

“It was to create a safe space and also like simultaneously to spread awareness that this person is dangerous,” said Gelb.

The private group, viewed by CBC News, has more than 1,400 members as of June 7 and hundreds of posts from survivors and former clients — some named and others anonymous — and other community members.

Gelb, who was a client at Last Door in 2015 and then worked at its youth program until 2018, said he “couldn’t have imagined” how many people would come forward with allegations about Haber.

“The quantity of people that were coming forward was really shocking,” he said.

Some Last Door staff were added to the group the day it was founded, and the facility reported the allegations to police shortly after, the NWPD confirmed.

A bald man in a white shirt and dark cardigan smiles at the camera. He is standing in an office.
Giuseppe Ganci, director of community development for Last Door Recovery Society, called efforts to bring allegations about Adam Haber to light ‘bullshit’ in a text to former client and staff member Noah Gelb. He is pictured here on the Last Door website. (Last Door Recovery Society)

But in a series of text messages to Gelb on the day the group was founded, Last Door’s director of community development, Giuseppe Ganci, called collective efforts to raise concerns about Haber to the society “bullshit.”

“It is really sad to see rich white kids like you who can pay for private treatment anywhere in Canada getting a nonprofit charity that helps poor motherf–kers like me to get clean involved in all this bullshit. Think about it,” Ganci wrote to Gelb in one text message, viewed by CBC News.

“It’s hard enough to deal with all the harm reduction trolls on social media. Now, we gotta deal with our f–king alumni[s],” he said in another.

Last Door has some publicly funded spaces, but the majority are private spaces that can either be paid fully out of pocket or partially with employment insurance, income and disability assistance or extended health benefits from an employer or through a union.

Ganci, who had told Gelb he was not speaking for Last Door, apologized in a follow-up text message on Jan. 29.

“It was a really rough week last week. Finding out on Facebook that I’m part of a system that’s being accused of overlooking girls getting raped really [threw] me off the edge,” he said.

CBC reached out to Ganci for comment.

Last Door responded and said Ganci had not been speaking for the organization in his personal texts in its emailed statement.

Posts calling for action reported by Last Door staff

But just 10 days after Ganci apologized, he and Last Door executive director Jared Nilsson attempted to prevent a survivor, whom CBC News called Emma in previous reporting, from speaking out in a public Facebook group.

A Feb. 8 post by Emma invited members in a public New Westminister Facebook group with nearly 20,000 members to sign the open letter and calls to action they had sent to Last Door, Westminster House and Fraser Health.

Ganci and Nilsson reported the post for bullying and harassment in an attempt to have it taken down, according to screenshots of the reports shared by the group’s administrator, Iain Carson-Huggins. CBC News has confirmed the accounts belong to the two leaders.

Carson-Huggins said he did not take down the post after he saw who had reported it.

“I was like, ‘Why is this person trying to take down an allegation against the company that they’re on?’ Like it just seemed very suspicious,” said Carson-Huggins, who has never been involved with Last Door or Westminister House.

He posted the screenshot of the reports in a comment under the original reports.

“Normally, I wouldn’t do something like that, but I thought this was just such an outrageous request that the community deserved to understand, to see what they were trying to do.”

A bald man in glasses and a suite smiles and sits on a desk in an office.
Jared Nilsson, executive director of the Last Door Recovery Society, tried to report a survivor’s post for bullying and harassment in a public Facebook group in order to have it taken down on Feb. 8, 2023. (Last Door Recovery Society)

Angela Marie MacDougall, the executive director of Battered Women’s Support Services, said survivors came to her for help earlier in January after their reports weren’t taken seriously.

“For those folks that had come forward, they were very unhappy with the response from the organizations. There seemed to be a minimizing of the concerns,” MacDougall said.

MacDougall said it pointed to a pervasive “culture of silence” around sexual assault in the New Westminister recovery community.

And being silenced or dismissed when raising a report can also make a survivor unlikely to seek support or tell someone again in the future, she said, which compounds their trauma.

But social media has also helped “to re-empower vulnerable people and improve the safety of our communities,” said Sandy Kovacs, a Vancouver-based lawyer who represents sexual assault survivors in civil complaints.

Gelb, who was clear he does not speak for survivors, said the response from Ganci, Nilsson and other leaders felt like a betrayal of his dedication to the community and his own recovery.

“I lived in that community for a number of years. I worked there. I had friends in that community. I had volunteered at events, and I had mentored people going through the program,” said Gelb, who has since moved to Toronto. “To know that someone could flip on a dime like that was, quite honestly, hurtful and shocking.”

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