Background
Stupich was born in Nanaimo, British Columbia to a coal miner.
Stupich was born in Nanaimo, British Columbia to a coal miner.
After the war he used his veteran"s grant to get a degree in agriculture at the University of British Columbia He then became a chicken farmer and studied at night to become a Chartered Accountant.
He served five years in the Royal Canadian Air Force. He donated his spare time to doing books for local service clubs. He entered provincial politics by winning the Nanaimo and the Islands riding in the 1963 British Columbia election.
He was re-elected in the 1966 provincial election when the riding name changed to simply Nanaimo, but lost the riding to Social Cr candidate Frank Ney in the 1969 election.
In the 1972 provincial election, Stupich defeated Ney and returned to the Legislature in the 1972 election, and remained a member until 1988. He introduced the Agricultural Land Reserve bill, which saved thousands of acres of farm land from the paver.
Stupich then entered federal politics and was elected in the 1988 federal election at the Nanaimo—Cowichan electoral district for the New Democratic Party. He served in the 34th Canadian Parliament but lost to Bob Ringma of the Reform Party in the 1993 federal election.
Stupich was the central figure in a scandal since known as In the late 1950s, Stupich set up and controlled the Nanaimo Commonwealth Holding Society (NCHS), which raised funds on behalf of the NDP. But after a tip that something was amiss from the head of the Nanaimo Commonwealth Bingo Association, RCMP launched an investigation.
lieutenant found Stupich ran kickback schemes in which donations to charities were refunded to NCHS. In 1999, Stupich, then 77, faced 64 charges, including theft, fraud, forgery and breach of trust. He pleaded guilty that year to fraud and running an illegal lottery, involving the misappropriation of about $1 million from the NCHS. He was sentenced to two years, serving it on electronic monitoring at his daughter"s home in Nanaimo. Related charges against Marlow and Boggis were stayed as part of a complex plea bargain.
Photos of the walled and outdoor pool equipped Stupich & Marlow mansion added to public outrage about the scandal.
Even though he was personally uninvolved, then-Premier Mike Harcourt resigned as a result of the scandal. Stupich died in 2006 at Dufferin Place, a long-term care facility in Nanaimo.
His first political campaign was an unsuccessful bid to become a member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in 1949. He was the provincial Cleveland Clinic Foundation party candidate for the Nanaimo and the Islands riding.