logo
Nearly decade-long Ontario sexual assault case 'deeply problematic,' say advocates

Nearly decade-long Ontario sexual assault case 'deeply problematic,' say advocates

CBC4 hours ago

Social Sharing
Meg got a call from a London, Ont., police officer late last year telling her new charges were pending against the man who she says attacked her in 2016.
He was convicted of sexually assaulting her in 2019, and placed on the sex offender registry. By 2023, his statutory sentence in federal prison was over and he'd been released. Meg said fortunately, he'd stayed away from her.
The officer gave no details about the new arrest, but had called to make sure Meg was OK. She said she was — until the officer dropped a bomb.
"Have you heard about the appeal?" Meg recalls the officer asking. "And I was like no, and she goes, 'Well, somebody from victim services should be calling you about that soon. Have a good weekend. Goodbye.'"
Meg, whose real name is protected by a court-ordered publication ban, later found out the man convicted in her case had been granted an appeal a year before, but no one had told her. That gave way to an even bigger mystery.
I've done my part. I have shown up for this system time and time again to do my part, to hold this man accountable. - Meg
"He served his time. He has been released," Meg said. "What is there to appeal?"
The appeal meant his conviction was set aside, and he was no longer on the sex offender registry.
Court documents reveal a case rife with long delays and miscommunication, one that legal experts and women's advocates say is indicative of a criminal system that too often fails both sides.
"It is deeply problematic for the accused. It's deeply problematic for the complainant," said Pam Hrick, executive director and general counsel of the Women's Legal Education and Action Fund, also known as LEAF.
"You really want, especially in cases of sexual violence, to have a process that is moving forward as expeditiously as possible, where the complainant, where the accused are informed in a timely way of how things are proceeding, and where resolutions aren't left hanging over anyone's head for close to a decade."
On June 11, a text message from the victim/witness assistance program in London confirmed to Meg that a new trial would not proceed. The case had ended — right about where it started.
"I've done my part. I have shown up for this system time and time again to do my part, to hold this man accountable," said Meg. "He will be absolved of any accountability."
Lack of communication 'inexcusable'
CBC reviewed hundreds of pages of court documents from this case including the sentencing decision, transcripts of testimony and the Court of Appeal decision.
The Crown attorney assigned to this case in London was not allowed to speak to CBC. Questions were instead forwarded to the office of Ontario's Ministry of the Attorney General, which refused to comment.
"To protect confidentiality, the ministry is unable to share any information about specific cases and its communication with victims," a ministry spokesperson wrote in an email.
Asked who is responsible for keeping a claimant informed — in this case, that an appeal had been granted and a new trial ordered — the ministry said the Crown is "to ensure that efforts are made to advise the victim of significant information throughout the proceedings," as noted in the victims directive in the Crown prosecution manual.
"This is just an example of the ... criminal system failing," said Hrick, who reviewed some of the court documents for CBC. "It's inexcusable that she wasn't informed.... She's entitled to understand and to have explained to her what happened."
'I did everything I was supposed to do'
Meg did everything alleged victims are told to do: say no, fight off the attacker, seek help and report the assault.
The accused was her neighbour and they'd previously dated. On a summer night in 2016 he dropped by and they drank wine on her porch, according to court documents.
Meg testified she repeatedly said no to sex that night, but he forced himself on her. A rape kit was later administered at a hospital, she reported the assault to police and charges were laid.
"I did everything I was supposed to do as a survivor," said Meg.
In her victim impact statement, she described her physical injuries.
"I had never been attacked like this, I had never had to fight someone off of me before, and my complete exhaustion was my reminder that I had failed to protect myself," she told the court.
He was convicted by a jury in July 2019. Sentencing, initially scheduled for late 2019, didn't happen until early 2021. His appeal was submitted that spring.
Meg says Correctional Service Canada did inform her of his movements while he was inside the prison system, including any day passes, and she was notified about his release back into the community in late 2022.
"I thought, OK, the appeal didn't go through, there's no need to think about it anymore, and I just started to live my life knowing that that is all done and it's behind me," she recalled.
It's unclear why the appeal court didn't hear the case until late 2023.
"The delay didn't work for him here either because he just sat in jail for all that time. I just don't know why that happened," said Tonya Kent, a criminal defence lawyer in Toronto. "There's an impact on both parties."
'No public interest'
Meg said the Crown told her at this stage it wouldn't be in the public interest to hold a new trial, which could take another few years to reach completion.
"Tell me how this court system has upheld my rights. Tell me how they have protected me, because they have not," said Meg.
Claimants like Meg need to remember they are in the system as a witness and the Crown is not their lawyer, said Kent.
"He's already served the sentence, so what is the purpose of trying to get a conviction? And then what?" Kent asked. "The system is not going to be here for you to get closure."
That's why some are calling for solutions outside the justice system.
Laura Morrison, a member of the Survivors for Justice Reform Coalition, says sexual violence is one of the "most pervasive under-reported and under-attended to" crimes.
The coalition of survivors of sexual and intimate partner violence is calling for justice reform including restorative and transformative justice options.
According to a Statistics Canada report in November 2024, only six per cent of sexual assaults are reported to police and only one in 19 led to an accused person being sentenced to custody.
Morrison, who also volunteers at the Toronto Rape Crisis Centre, says she explains to survivors the roadblocks and potential harm that can be experienced in the justice system.
"You are providing yourself as a service to the Crown," said Morrison. "It has very little to do with you and you need to know that going into it."
As the high-profile sexual assault trial involving five hockey players worked its way through court in London this spring, Meg was among the people protesting outside.
"It's an incredible feeling, honestly, to be surrounded by a group of people who get it and who are survivor-focused," she said. "You're speaking for everyone who's been through this system, everyone who's going to go through this system, and demanding change, demanding justice for survivors."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Death inquest for man fatally shot by police near Moose Jaw to begin
Death inquest for man fatally shot by police near Moose Jaw to begin

CTV News

time27 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Death inquest for man fatally shot by police near Moose Jaw to begin

An RCMP officer blocks traffic on Highway 1 near Belle Plaine on July 12, 2022. An inquest date has been set for the death of Ryan Booker, who was shot dead by police following a standoff. A death inquest for a 26-year-old man who was fatally shot by police in 2022 near Moose Jaw following a pursuit on Highway 1 is scheduled to begin on Monday. The inquest for Ryan Booker will be held at the Royal Hotel in Regina from June 23 - June 26. The province said the coroner's inquest is to determine who died, when and where, and the medical cause and manner of death. Recommendations from the coroner's jury may also be provided in an effort to prevent similar deaths in the future. The incident that led to Booker's death occurred during the early morning hours of July 17, 2022, when a man was spotted with a gun and was allegedly uttering threats in a parking lot in Moose Jaw. Police responded to the scene, but the suspect fled which led to a pursuit on Highway 1 ending near Belle Plaine when the suspect pulled over, leading to a six-hour standoff with officers. Crisis negotiators responded to the scene, but the situation dramatically escalated and around 7 a.m., Booker was fatally shot by police after pointing a gun at officers and not responding to commands. He received medical attention at the scene but was pronounced dead soon after. After the incident, Moose Jaw police and Saskatchewan RCMP requested to have Saskatoon police conduct an independent investigation. -With files from David Prisciak

Quebec's coroner database aims to identify hundreds of bodies
Quebec's coroner database aims to identify hundreds of bodies

CTV News

time31 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Quebec's coroner database aims to identify hundreds of bodies

The Quebec coroner's office is now making some of its oldest, coldest cases public in the hopes that someone, somewhere, might recognize something. The Quebec coroner's office is now making some of its oldest, coldest cases public — in the hopes that someone, somewhere, might recognize something. In February, the office launched an online public database of unidentified bodies, containing photos and descriptions of personal items found with them: sweaters, jewelry, tattoos, scars, shoes, wallets — even fragments of tattoos or dental work. So far, more than 120 cases have been posted, which officials say is only a fraction of what's to come. 'There are a lot of unidentified deceased persons,' said Karine Spénard, who is leading the work on the cases. 'In the last 40 years, we have about 500 to 600 people we still haven't identified.' The database is part of a modernization effort launched under Quebec's current chief coroner two years ago. Along with a multi-agency working group that revisits unsolved files, the new tool is meant to directly involve the public — something officials say is critical to solving cases that might otherwise remain buried. Spénard said that even after decades, the right clue — a jacket, a scar, a pair of boots — can spark a lead. 'We've had people say, 'I think this could be my brother,' just by seeing photos,' she said. 'We're now able to go back and match bodies with medical records or DNA — but we need that first spark. The public gives us that.' One of the people watching the database closely is Suzanne Lejeune, whose sister, Louise, disappeared from LaSalle in 1990. Louise had moved from Ontario to Quebec to be near her son, who was being taken care of by her mother in Châteauguay on Montreal's South Shore. Diagnosed with schizophrenia while pregnant, she was receiving disability support and living on limited means. 'She really hoped that she would get better and eventually regain custody,' said Lejeune. 'She only cared about her son.' Louise took the bus every week to visit him — until one day, she stopped. 'She missed her December visitation and then Christmas,' she said, adding she and other family members didn't realize she was missing for years. At the time, she said she and her sisters were no longer speaking to their mother. It wasn't until 1995 that she was told Louise had been gone since 1990. Even more troubling, Lejeune later found out that her sister's disappearance hadn't been reported right away. She said it wasn't until Louise's boyfriend called police in February 1991 that a missing persons file was opened. Today, Lejeune said there are still no suspects, no evidence, and no leads. 'No body, no crime, no justice,' she said. 'I can't do anything to find out what happened to her without a body.' She described her sister as kind, shy, and vulnerable — someone who likely could have trusted the wrong person. Louise also didn't speak French. 'She was the smartest out of all of us — the sweetest and she didn't deserve whatever happened to her,' said Lejeune. If Louise's case were added to the coroner's new site, Lejeune believes she might recognize something, like the sweater she always wore. 'It was a thick, grey wool sweater with a purple collar. I would always tease her about it being ugly, but she loved it,' she said. 'It was the last thing she was seen wearing.' The database, she said, could be especially helpful for families like hers — those who missed the chance to raise the alarm early on, and are still holding out hope decades later. 'Sometimes, a visual is what clicks. Someone sees a piece of clothing and remembers,' she said. The site also includes a tip line for anyone who thinks they recognize something. Spénard said they're gradually uploading more cases, which could include files that date back as far as 1953. Since forming the cold case working group, Spénard said the coroner's office has confirmed 22 identities. Private investigator Stéphane Luce, founder of Unresolved murders and disappearances in Quebec (MDIQ), a citizen-led investigative group, called the database a 'great surprise,' and something he believes could be a game-changer if used properly. 'In the past, we would hear about a murder or a missing person, but with almost no details,' Luce said. 'Now, with those kinds of tools, we can get lots of information, especially with photos.' He added that public access is critical to progress. 'They need information from the public to be able to solve these cases,' he said. 'They need to work more closely with the public and with private investigators like us. We're all part of the same puzzle.' For Lejeune, it all comes down to one thing. 'Hope,' she said. 'A piece of clothing, a fragment of something — that's all I'm looking for.'

FIRST READING: All the hidden extras buried in the Liberals' fast-tracked omnibus bills
FIRST READING: All the hidden extras buried in the Liberals' fast-tracked omnibus bills

National Post

time32 minutes ago

  • National Post

FIRST READING: All the hidden extras buried in the Liberals' fast-tracked omnibus bills

Article content What Bill C-4 would do is give political parties an exemption from all such guidelines, either federally or at the provincial level. What's more, it backtracks that exemption all the way to the year 2000. Article content The measures really have nothing to do with the rest of the bill, and they've notably showed up before in prior Liberal bills that dealt more specifically with elections law. Article content In addition to its ban on $10,000 cash payments, the Strong Borders Act would allow police to demand businesses turn over client info upon request, and without a warrant. Article content This is referred to as 'lawful access,' and it's something that police have been trying to get encoded into federal law since at least 2012. That was the year when a Conservative attempt to introduce the same fell apart following overwhelming public opposition. Lawful access is usually framed as something that would apply to internet companies, allowing police to demand the identities of anonymous web users that they deem to be up to no good. But the Strong Borders Act would extend to everyone from doctors to car rental companies to hotels. All police would need is 'reasonable grounds to suspect' that an offence 'has been or will be committed,' and then they'd be able to compel any of these businesses to clandestinely turn over private information on their clients. Article content The bill that's gotten the most attention in the current session of Parliament is Bill C-5, the One Canadian Economy Act. This is the one that would give cabinet the power to earmark 'national interest projects' that could be exempt from select federal laws, including the Indian Act, the Impact Assessment Act and even the Migratory Birds Convention Act. It is also the only bill on this list that passed before the summer break; it passed third reading late on Friday night. Article content The bill is being pitched as a way to speed through approvals for mines, highways, pipelines, ports and all the other 'nation-building projects' being promised by the Carney government. This is part of why it's received broad support from the Conservative caucus. Article content But if Bill C-5 is intended to slash red tape, it only extends it to businesses in the good graces of the prime minister. Bill C-5, in its unamended form, gives the prime minister unilateral control over which companies would be spared the odyssey of the typical Canadian approvals process, and which wouldn't. It's for this reason that Liberal MP Karina Gould has called it the 'King Carney' bill. Article content Bill C-3 is easily the most straight-forward piece of legislation on this list, but it's also the one that could end up having the most far-reaching impacts. It's a package of amendments to the Citizenship Act that would extend citizenship to the foreign-born children of Canadian expats. Article content One scenario cited by defenders of the bill could be the case of a Canadian Armed Forces soldier who has a child while deployed overseas. But Bill C-3 is broad enough that it would allow citizenship to be claimed by anyone born overseas whose parent is a Canadian and has spent at least 1,095 days in the country. So, in extreme cases, the child of someone who left Canada as a toddler could be eligible for Canadian citizenship. The standard is loose enough that it's not actually known how many instant Canadians this would create. Article content The Liberals could claim that none of this is their idea, and that they're simply fulfilling the terms of an Ontario Superior Court decision which found that it violated the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to place a 'first-generation limit' on citizenship. However, the federal government acknowledged that it never bothered to appeal the ruling, explaining in a backgrounder that 'we agree that the current law has unacceptable consequences for Canadians whose children were born outside the country.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store