British Columbia

Former B.C. social worker Robert Riley Saunders arrested, charged

A former social worker, accused of siphoning money from dozens of B.C.'s most vulnerable children for more than a decade, now faces 13 criminal charges including fraud and theft, the RCMP said Friday. 

Saunders, accused of siphoning money from vulnerable children, recently arrested in Alberta

Robert Riley Saunders, convicted in 2022 to five years in prison for defrauding children under B.C.'s Ministry of Children and Family Development care, has been granted full parole.
Former social worker Robert Riley Saunders was recently arrested in Alberta, the RCMP said Friday, after eluding officials for months. (Facebook)

A former social worker accused of siphoning money from dozens of B.C.'s most vulnerable children for more than a decade has been arrested and now faces 13 criminal charges, the RCMP said Friday.

Robert Riley Saunders, who eluded civil officials for months after the allegations first surfaced, was recently arrested in Alberta, the Mounties said. 

He was charged Wednesday with 10 counts of fraud over $5,000, one count of theft over $5,000, one count of breach of trust and one count of uttering a forged document. He remains in custody. 

Former foster children, the majority of whom are Indigenous, have accused Saunders of steering them away from stable, loving homes onto the street or more independent living situations when they were children. They said he then used joint bank accounts to take government aid for himself, when it was meant to fund their care.

The alleged offences happened from 2001 until Saunders, 50, was fired from the Ministry of Children and Family Development in 2018.

Many clients claim they were left homeless as a result of Saunders' behaviour. Some said they suffered physical and sexual abuse and ended up living with addiction.

The province settled a multi-million-dollar class-action lawsuit in the case last month. 

A lawyer for the plaintiffs said that more than 100 victims had come forward to register claims. As anyone who was in Saunders' care is eligible to receive between $25,000 and $250,000 in compensation, the province could pay out as much as $15 million.

Saunders was first hired by the ministry in 1996. He used a fake bachelor of social work degree made out to be from the University of Manitoba, as part of his original employment applications, according to court filings.

He worked in Kelowna, B.C., but vanished from the Okanagan city after he was fired.

Lawyers involved in the class-action lawsuit said they never found Saunders to serve him with the lawsuit, but that they'd heard rumours he spent part of the last two-and-a-half years working at golf courses in Calgary and Winnipeg.

RCMP said Saunders is set to appear in provincial court in Kelowna next week.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rhianna Schmunk

Senior Writer

Rhianna Schmunk is a senior writer covering domestic and international affairs at CBC News. Her work over the past decade has taken her across North America, from the Canadian Rockies to Washington, D.C. She routinely covers the Canadian courts, with a focus on precedent-setting civil cases. You can send story tips to rhianna.schmunk@cbc.ca.