
WEIGHT: 64 kg
Bust: B
One HOUR:50$
NIGHT: +30$
Services: Massage professional, Mistress, Fetish, Toys, Strap-ons
Junior ice hockey players have been the subject of sexual assault investigations by police fifteen times since In May , it was reported that Hockey Canada βthe governing body for the sport of ice hockey in Canadaβhad paid a settlement to a woman who alleged that she was the victim of a sexual assault perpetrated in by members of Canada's men's national junior team.
In June , Minister for Sport Pascale St-Onge froze the federal government's funding of Hockey Canada, and called for an investigation into whether public funds were used to fund the settlement.
In October , The Globe and Mail reported that Hockey Canada had created a "Participants Legacy Trust Fund" in with money from the National Equity Fund, for distribution to its members for "matters including but not limited to sexual abuse". Hockey Canada has denied that the fund has been used, while Hockey Saskatchewan stated that it receives interest from the trust to cover operating costs.
During continued hearings that month, interim Hockey Canada board chair Andrea Skinner stated that the settlement for the case was a means to resolve it in a "respectful" manner without a trial.
In the immediate wake of the scandal, most of Hockey Canada's corporate sponsors suspended their relationship with the organization, and the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Edmonton was held without sponsors. Hockey Canada stated that it would no longer use its National Equity Fund to fund sexual misconduct settlements, and later announced a plan to address "systemic issues" in the culture of hockey.