Nova Scotia

Halifax pediatrician pleads guilty to accessing child pornography

Dr. William Vitale has pleaded guilty to two counts of possession of child pornography, including anime, digital images and literature.

Dr. William Vitale will be sentenced next March for 2 counts of possession of child pornography

Dr. William Vitale was charged in February 2016. (CBC)

A Halifax pediatrician has pleaded guilty to accessing pornographic anime, digital images and literature involving children.

Dr. William Richard Vitale, who is in his 70s, will be sentenced March 14, 2019 for two counts of possession of child pornography. He entered his plea in Halifax provincial court on Monday. 

Crown prosecutor Perry Borden said Vitale accessed the files on his home computer between January 2013 and December 2014.

"You can get images that look like they're real but they're not, they could be 3D images … a large percentage of them were digital imagery, not photographs," he said.

Four other counts will be dropped at sentencing, said Borden. He added that Vitale's lawyer, Stan MacDonald, told the court he plans to challenge his client's addition to the sex offender registry.

Vitale was previously suspended by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia for mixing incompatible vaccines. (CBC)

Borden also said there will be a joint recommendation on sentencing. 

In 2016, Vitale was initially charged with possession of child pornography, accessing child pornography and having child pornography for the purpose of distribution. An additional three counts were added this past August, Borden said.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia immediately suspended Vitale after he was charged. That suspension remains in place. 

Previously reprimanded

Vitale, who graduated from McGill University's faculty of medicine in 1976, was reprimanded twice by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia.

He was disciplined in 2015 for writing prescriptions for a member of his own family and also in 2013 for improperly administering vaccinations. The college found he was improperly mixing incompatible vaccines in a single syringe.

The college ordered Vitale to undergo specialized ethics training in Toronto and to submit to an audit of his practice.

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